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HOME2023-01-22T13:43:33-07:00

Damn, there is so much great knowledge out there. Did you know that “BOOKS” are full of smart?? No, I mean like life changing, I-wish-I-knew-that-years-ago type stuff.

I know that I was waaaayyy late to the game figuring it out. And I know that a lot of you are too busy to read as much as you ‘should’. And that is why you need me.

I still remember how it started for me. It started in June of 2008. After 11  years …..Click to continue

Mortgage Today (PM) - 04/30/26 {{catlist}}
April 30, 2026
READ MORE WTMS Blog Today = What's up in Mortgage Today (PM) - 04/30/2026 Bonds shook off geopolitical nervousness and rallied into the close as oil prices retreated, pulling the 10-year yield down to 4.383% by 3:21 PM. MBS prices climbed 31 basis points on the day, signaling genuine bid strength in mortgages despite a heavy economic data dump that included strong jobs reports and sticky wage inflation. Yesterday's yield spike to 4.66% now looks like a potential technical ceiling—a pattern eerily similar to March 24–26 that could support another bounce if yields hold under 4.37%. The real question for originators isn't whether this bounce holds; it's whether this choppy, 30+ basis point intraday range becomes the new normal. This volatility destroys pipeline clarity and makes rate locks harder to sell when clients see the market swinging wild. The Fed held rates flat yesterday but signaled serious internal division with four dissenting votes—the most since 1992. That split matters far more than the hold itself because borrowers don't care what the Fed did; they care what comes next, and a fractured FOMC sends no clear signal about rate direction. With Powell's tenure ending soon and his successor uncertain on inflation strategy, the market is pricing in "higher for longer with surprises," which is exactly the environment where origination suffers most. You can defend a 7% rate world if clients believe rates go higher. You can defend a 4% world if clients see cuts ahead. But a 4.38% world with a confused Fed heading into a leadership transition? That's when lock-unlock hesitation paralyzes pipelines. Economic data arrived mostly in line with expectations, which actually worked in bonds' favor by removing surprise risk. Jobless claims fell to 189K versus 215K forecast—the lowest reading in over three years—but mortgages barely flinched, suggesting the market is already pricing in labor strength. Core PCE inflation matched expectations at 0.3% month-over-month and 3.2% year-over-year, offering no fresh inflation shock. GDP came in at 2.0% annualized versus 2.3% expected, which is softer but not recessionary and not enough to spark a rate-cut narrative. When data cooperates this way, technicals and sentiment dominate, which is why the oil correlation mattered more than any single number on the calendar. UMBS 30-year coupons posted solid intraday gains across the curve: the 5.0% coupon climbed 40 basis points to 98.75, the 5.5% gained 28 basis points to 100.66, and the 6.0% rose 20 basis points to 102.18. GNMA securities trended similarly but with slightly softer momentum, suggesting institutional demand is favoring agency UMBS paper over government mortgage-backed bonds. Treasury volatility compressed—the 2-year yield fell 8.2 basis points while the 30-year fell only 3.3 basis points—indicating a modest flattening bias as longer rates held firmer. For lenders holding hedges, this curve behavior creates both cover-your-short opportunities and risk if the steepening resumes. The 10-year Treasury yield's technical floor at 4.34–4.37% is now the most important level for originators to watch over the next 48 hours. If that breaks lower, expect another 4–6 basis point decline in primary mortgage rates as the market tests the 4.28–4.19% ceiling range, which could unlock a small wave of refi activity and ease origination pressure. If yields bounce back above 4.40% instead, we're back to the rangebound chop that killed productivity all April, and clients will hunker down until the Fed narrative clarifies or a new leadership team emerges. War-related headlines will likely remain the wildcard—small geopolitical flare-ups are now triggering 2–3 basis point swings faster than any economic release. The real origination test isn't today's 31-basis-point MBS pop; it's whether lenders can convince borrowers that a fragmented Fed and 4.38% rates justify locking sooner rather than later. Hesitation thrives in this gray zone where no direction is clear and surprise risk cuts both ways. Lock your stronger files while technicals favor yields under 4.40%; float only if you've earned enough pipeline flow to afford the volatility tax. The next 72 hours will tell us if this bounce is real support or just another false signal before yields resume climbing. **Locking vs Floating** Yesterday's yield spike and today's oil-driven rally illustrate why technical ceilings matter: if 4.66% was a genuine blow-off top, then yields pulling back under 4.40% could indicate early support forming. From a purely technical view, yesterday's high yields matched those seen on March 24–26, suggesting this level has tested buyer interest twice before. From a market psychology view, volatility will continue to stem from geopolitical headlines and Fed messaging confusion, not from economics alone. Lock borrowers in the 4.34–4.40% range; float if you're chasing risk premium on a potential dip toward 4.20%. **Today's Events** Continued Claims (Apr)/18: 1,785K vs 1,820K forecast, 1,821K prior Core PCE (m/m) (Mar): 0.3% vs 0.3% forecast, 0.4% prior Core PCE (y/y) (Mar): 3.2% vs 3.2% forecast, 3.0% prior Core PCE Prices QoQ Q1: 4.3% vs 4.1% forecast, 2.7% prior Employment Costs Q1: 0.9% vs 0.8% forecast, 0.7% prior GDP Q1: 2.0% vs 2.3% forecast, 0.5% prior Jobless Claims (Apr)/25: 189K vs 215K forecast, 214K prior PCE (y/y) (Mar): 3.5% vs 3.5% forecast, 2.8% prior PCE prices (m/m) (Mar): 0.7% vs 0.7% forecast, 0.4% prior **Bond Pricing** **UMBS 30 yr** | Coupon | Price | Intra-Day Change | **GNMA 30 yr** | Coupon | Price | Intra-Day Change | **Treasuries** | Term | Yield | Price | Intra-Day Yield Change | | 2 yr | 3.865 | 100.02 | -0.082 | | 3 yr | 3.889 | 98.908 | -0.078 | | 5 yr | 4.003 | 99.426 | -0.074 | | 7 yr | 4.186 | 100.384 | -0.065 | | 10 yr | 4.371 | 98.024 | -0.057 | | 30 yr | 4.966 | 96.646 | -0.033 | Market Data
Mortgage Today (PM) - 04/29/26 {{catlist}}
April 29, 2026
READ MORE WTMS Blog Today = What's up in Mortgage Today (PM) - 04/29/2026 Mortgage-backed securities ended the day down 56 basis points on 30-year UMBS 5.0, as geopolitical tensions over Iran's Strait of Hormuz blockade combined with a hawkish Fed tone to push bonds lower. The 10-year Treasury climbed 8.1 basis points to 4.429%, reflecting investor concerns about sustained energy inflation and limited rate-cut expectations. Markets initially absorbed the Fed's quarter-point hold steadily, but four dissenting votes—the most since 1992—signaled pushback against the "easing bias" language, unsettling bond traders and locking in afternoon losses. War-related supply shock fears dominated today's volatility more than any Fed policy misstep. Overnight weakness began with news of a potential U.S. blockade extension at the Strait of Hormuz, pushing oil upward and yields across the curve higher before the Fed even opened its mouth. The central bank statement removed no policies and added measured caution about Middle East "implications," stopping short of dovish reassurance that mortgage originators might have hoped for. By 4:54 p.m., when losses reached their deepest, geopolitical anxiety had completely overshadowed any positive rate-cut signal the Fed could offer. Mortgage originators should note the absence of overhead technical support in the 10-year yield, which sits just below 4.43% with a ceiling at 4.48% now under pressure. MBS weakness accelerated as GNMA and UMBS securities across all coupon points finished the day in negative territory, mirroring a broader flight to safety in Treasury markets. Originators holding rate locks face margin compression if this weakness persists, and pull-through rates are likely to suffer as clients lose confidence in near-term refinancing upside. Lock recommendations remain defensive pending resolution of energy volatility or clearer Fed guidance on the path forward. Economic data mixed signals with soft housing permits offset by robust durable goods and capital expenditure readings. The MBA Purchase Index came in at 177.7 versus 175.6 previously, showing mild purchase momentum despite elevated rates, while refi activity dropped to 977.9 from 1,023.1 as rates above 4.4% discourage rate-and-term business. Housing starts beat expectations at 1.502 million units, suggesting builders are still moving forward despite cost headwinds tied to new HUD energy efficiency rules now being phased out. For originators, this means the spring purchase season may not collapse, but refi pipelines will stay thin. A critical policy shift emerged as HUD scrapped Biden-era energy efficiency standards that had choked off new construction lending in entry-level and rural markets. FHA and USDA programs can now process loans tied to homes failing to meet those stricter codes, unlocking deal flow that had migrated to private programs or stalled entirely. This change particularly helps loan officers working in affordable housing and rural markets, where cost barriers had become insurmountable; expect an uptick in FHA/USDA volume once word spreads through the correspondent and broker channels. Real estate professionals should see improved transaction feasibility in markets that had been locked out. AI-driven automation is rapidly reshaping the origination landscape, with industry executives openly discussing 15% workforce reductions tied to partnerships with companies like Valon and HomeVision. The technology is moving beyond documentation efficiency into full underwriting and valuation automation, raising the question of whether the mortgage industry is entering an "efficiency era" where human roles shrink permanently or pivot to relationship management only. For loan officers and support staff, the implication is clear: survival depends on mobility into advisory, compliance, or specialized roles that machines cannot yet replicate. Locking vs Floating Defensive positioning remains prudent until overhead resistance clears. The market pain from Iran geopolitics should eventually self-limit—oil spikes high enough to choke economic growth and yields rise enough to attract value buyers—but the inflection point is unknowable. Absence of technical support argues against aggressive floating; lock any client showing hesitation. Today's Events MBA Purchase Index (Apr): 177.7 vs 175.6 previous MBA Refi Index (Apr): 977.9 vs 1,023.1 previous Mortgage Market Index (Apr): 298.5 vs 303.3 previous Building Permits (Mar): 1.372M vs 1.39M forecast, 1.538M previous Building Permits (Feb): 1.538M vs 1.386M previous Core CapEx (Mar): 3.3% vs 0.5% forecast, 0.6% previous Durable Goods (Mar): 0.8% vs 0.5% forecast, -1.4% previous Housing Starts (Mar): 1.502M vs 1.40M forecast Bond Pricing UMBS 30 yr | Coupon | Price | Intra-Day Change | GNMA 30 yr | Coupon | Price | Intra-Day Change | Treasuries | Term | Yield | Price | Intra-Day Yield Change | Market Data
Mortgage Today (PM) - 04/28/26 {{catlist}}
April 29, 2026
READ MORE --- WTMS Blog Today = What's up in Mortgage Today (PM) - 04/27/2026 Bonds drifted sideways today as markets awaited bigger news, with stalled Iran negotiations proving almost irrelevant to mortgage pricing. UMBS 5.0 fell 16 basis points from the prior close while the 10-year yield rose 3.3 basis points to 4.335 percent, reflecting the lack of urgency typical of a slow Monday afternoon. Treasury auctions and equity market strength continue to siphon demand away from mortgages, leaving originators in a holding pattern until policy or geopolitical headlines move the needle. The technical ceiling around 4.40 percent in the 10-year remains intact, giving rate shoppers a ceiling to watch. For LOs, this is a day to stand pat on repricing until volatility returns or the week's Fed and economic data reshape expectations. Real Brokerage's $880 million acquisition of RE/MAX Holdings represents a structural shift in agent-to-LO pipeline dynamics that deserves serious attention. The combined entity controls Motto Mortgage alongside RE/MAX's established franchise network, creating a platform with 180,000+ agents and embedded mortgage operations in dozens of markets. This consolidation tightens the agent-to-lender funnel by keeping referral deals in-house rather than broadcasting them to competing originators. For independent LOs and smaller shops, expect fewer loose referrals and stiffer competition on the ones that remain. Real's AI tools will amplify this advantage, making it harder for traditional rate-driven strategies to compete against a platform that controls both sides of the transaction. Mortgage rates fell nearly 60 basis points year-over-year to 6.23 percent, yet purchase applications jumped only 10 percent week-over-week and contract cancellations hit their highest March level since 2023. Economists cite a "crisis of confidence" among buyers despite improved affordability, with Iran war uncertainty overriding the rate tailwind for many households. Cancellation rates of 13.4 percent signal that lower rates are not converting into closings as expected—borrowers are deferring decisions until geopolitical risk recedes. For originators, this means the rate environment has become nearly irrelevant to purchase volume growth; consumer psychology and headline risk now drive behavior far more than pricing. Market share battles on rates alone will prove futile until buyer confidence stabilizes. Maine's new home equity investment regulation sets a national precedent by classifying shared appreciation agreements as mortgages, requiring enhanced disclosure, mandatory housing counseling, and legal representation before closing. Products marketed as "home equity investments" can balloon payoff amounts by hundreds of thousands of dollars, often forcing distressed home sales when borrowers discover the true cost of their initial cash advance. The law holds downstream purchasers liable for origination violations, creating meaningful compliance and portfolio risk for lenders who acquire these products. This regulation signals growing state-level scrutiny of non-traditional credit products, suggesting mortgage professionals should expect similar rules in other jurisdictions. Originators holding or selling HEI loans should audit their compliance framework immediately. Federal authorities arrested a Milwaukee real estate group owner for allegedly leasing properties to drug dealers and co-mingling trafficking proceeds with legitimate rental income to obscure the money trail. The case implicates twenty-five properties tied to drug trafficking, overdose deaths, and alleged dealers, with the defendant's office manager charged separately for structuring arrangements to keep traffickers' names off paperwork. While this is an extreme outlier, it underscores the reputational and legal risks inherent in real estate finance tied to commercial properties with uncertain ownership or end-use verification. Lenders should strengthen KYC and beneficial ownership verification on non-traditional collateral and borrower profiles to avoid unwitting involvement in illicit activity. Compliance and due diligence frameworks that rely solely on stated loan purpose invite operational and reputational liability. Powell's final Federal Reserve meeting this week puts inflation expectations and the "soft handoff" narrative back in focus, with Core PCE and GDP data following to reshape rate expectations. Technical weakness—including a potential "death cross" in mortgage charts—signals caution, but the Fed's inflation messaging could still provide support for bond pricing if expectations remain anchored. Volatility remains elevated despite range-bound trading, and originators should prepare for sharp moves if economic data or Fed commentary surprises to the hawkish side. This week's calendar is a reminder that complacency in mortgages can evaporate in hours once policy certainty shifts. Lock-and-hold strategies should remain disciplined until clearer directional signals emerge from Powell and the inflation data. nn Locking vs Floating Markets remain content to drift sideways until major news breaks, with bond traders dismissive of stalled peace negotiations and focused on the Fed policy cycle ahead. Lower volatility than expected over the weekend suggests the street is waiting for Powell's final meeting to reshape rate expectations, so casual lock recommendations lack conviction at current levels. Float-minded originators can justify holding rate locks for quality borrowers if geopolitical headlines or Fed messaging provide tailwinds, but the range-bound structure should prevent aggressive repricing in either direction. nn Today's Events 5-Year Note Auction at 1:00 PM EDT. nn Bond Pricing UMBS 30 yr | Coupon | Price | Intra-Day Change | GNMA 30 yr | Coupon | Price | Intra-Day Change | Treasuries | Term | Yield | Price | Intra-Day Yield Change | Market Data
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