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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 (AM) - 05/18/26 {{catlist}}
May 18, 2026
READ MORE **WTMS Blog Today = What's up in Mortgage Today (AM) - 05/18/2026** The New York Federal Reserve manufacturing index exploded to 19.60 in May, crushing the 7.5 forecast and signaling unexpected economic strength that sent bond yields higher across the curve. Industrial production also beat expectations with a 0.7% gain in April versus the 0.3% forecast, reversing prior weakness and fueling fears that inflation pressures may intensify. These hotter-than-expected data points arrive amid elevated crude oil prices holding above $100 per barrel, driven by uncertainty surrounding the Iran conflict and the Strait of Hormuz. The combination of stronger growth and energy-driven inflation concerns has markets pricing in a 60-40 probability of a Federal Reserve rate hike by January, forcing mortgage professionals to monitor geopolitical risk alongside domestic economics. Bond yields drifted weaker intraday despite the hawkish data, with Treasury curves showing modest volatility as investors digest the inflation implications. Mortgage originators face mounting cost pressures as per-loan origination costs climbed to $11,898 in Q1 2026 from $11,102 in Q4 2025, highlighting the competitive squeeze between pricing and production efficiency. The CFPB remains a significant regulatory force despite prior Administration statements suggesting reductions, as the bureau requested funding exceeding $140 million for fiscal 2026 and continues advancing discrete rulemaking initiatives. Current CFPB priorities include addressing loan officer compensation structures, finalizing the servicing rule, refining ability-to-repay standards, and streamlining refinance documentation requirements. The MBA is collaborating with the agency on credit modernization discussions that question traditional tri-merge credit reporting and pilot programs under review by the FHFA. Mortgage professionals should expect continued regulatory evolution around AI governance, vendor oversight, and consumer data usage, as demonstrated by scheduled industry panels at MBA Secondary addressing legal and compliance realities. Compliance teams must stay aligned with evolving agency expectations rather than assuming deregulatory momentum. Housing affordability remains a structural headwind as U.S. Homeowners with mortgages now pay 37 percent more per month than renters, forcing prospective borrowers toward difficult choices including potential relocation for affordable property. LendingTree data highlights that rental markets outperform ownership costs in every major metropolitan area, even in the tightest housing markets, due to elevated mortgage rates and home prices. This affordability crisis creates opportunity in reverse mortgages and home equity tapping solutions, given that $14.5 trillion in senior home equity remains largely untapped by traditional refinance programs. Mortgage professionals operating in origination-constrained environments should explore alternative products and client segments that address specific affordability barriers and liquidity needs. The shift toward equity extraction and non-traditional loan products reflects realistic adaptation to persistent rate and price headwinds. Capital markets remain dominated by geopolitical risk over domestic economic data, as oil prices and Iran conflict developments drive investor sentiment and bond yields far more than traditional inflation metrics or Fed policy signals. Treasury yields hold elevated levels near year-to-date highs following last week's selloff on hot consumer and producer price prints combined with climbing energy costs. Market participants are increasingly focused on April FOMC meeting minutes scheduled for release this week to assess committee debate on the path of policy prior to Fed Chairman Kevin Warsh's recent swearing-in. The question of whether committee members view the next move as equally likely to be a rate cut versus a rate hike will carry amplified weight given recent inflation surprises. Until geopolitical tensions ease or energy prices stabilize, rate volatility and mortgage rate uncertainty should be expected. **Locking vs Floating** Yield ceilings and floors have proved useful for tracking broader bond market momentum, particularly when sharp breakouts test levels unseen for a year. A peaceful resolution to the Iran conflict would likely push rates lower, but the timeline remains unknowable and dependent on developments outside traditional economic forecasting. Borrowers should remain cautious about floating rate locks until clarity emerges on energy markets and geopolitical trajectories. **Today's Events** NY Fed Manufacturing (May): 19.60 vs 7.5 forecast, 11.00 previous Industrial Production (April): 0.7% vs 0.3% forecast, -0.5% previous **Bond Pricing** **UMBS 30 yr** | Coupon | Price | Intra-Day Change | | 5.0 | 97.35 | -0.06 | | 5.5 | 99.69 | -0.02 | | 6.0 | 101.61 | 0.05 | **GNMA 30 yr** | Coupon | Price | Intra-Day Change | | 5.0 | 98.09 | 0 | | 5.5 | 100.17 | -0.1 | | 6.0 | 101.57 | 0 | **Treasuries** | Term | Yield | Price | Intra-Day Yield Change | | 2 yr | 4.077 | 99.617 | -0.009 | | 3 yr | 4.142 | 98.206 | -0.001 | | 5 yr | 4.256 | 98.299 | 0.008 | | 7 yr | 4.424 | 98.963 | 0.009 | | 10 yr | 4.596 | 96.259 | 0.001 | | 30 yr | 5.125 | 94.285 | 0.007 | Market Data
Mortgage Today (PM) - 05/15/26 {{catlist}}
May 15, 2026
READ MORE **WTMS Blog Today = What's up in Mortgage Today (PM) - 05/15/2026** Mortgage-backed securities plunged 0.75 points Friday as global uncertainty over Iran tensions and persistent inflation fears sent Treasury yields soaring to one-year highs. The 10-year Treasury hit 4.6%, a psychological ceiling that forced bond investors to reassess rate expectations well into 2027, meaning mortgage rates are pricing in extended duration of elevated borrowing costs. NY Fed Manufacturing came in at a scorching 19.60 versus forecast of 7.5, while Industrial Production beat at 0.7% versus 0.3% expected, painting a picture of a surprisingly resilient economy despite recession warnings. These hot economic reads collided head-on with geopolitical anxiety, creating a whipsaw environment where rates moved sharply higher throughout the session with MBS and 10-year yields unable to find any ground. For mortgage originators, Friday's volatility underscores the challenge of rate sheet management when economic strength clashes with inflation persistence and no clear path to Fed rate cuts. Kevin Warsh's Senate confirmation as the next Federal Reserve Chair offered brief market optimism, but the rally quickly faded when reality sank in: sticky inflation dynamics and Iran conflict uncertainty mean rate-cutting expectations are being pushed further into the future. Markets had anticipated Warsh's first FOMC meeting in June might signal dovish policy shifts, yet energy price spikes and broad-based inflation data have complicated that timeline considerably. The 30-year fixed mortgage rate sat at 6.66% on Thursday and appears destined to push higher given Friday's yield trajectory, squeezing both purchase and refinance volume. Treasury auctions this week showed weak demand for long-duration bonds, with pension funds and insurance companies demanding higher yields to absorb new supply. For lenders, this signals that rate stability remains elusive and client conversations must shift from rate relief hopes to longer-term financing strategies. The Rocket/UWM servicing lawsuit escalates an already contentious competitive environment in mortgage origination, with Rocket claiming UWM violated non-solicit agreements by targeting 182,000 Mr. Cooper borrowers through aggressive rate cuts and AI-powered marketing systems. UWM's "Refi Shield 100" program and its KEEP AI system allegedly breached the 2024 MSR sale agreement, costing Rocket nearly $100 million in lost servicing revenue since the Mr. Cooper acquisition. UWM fired back calling the lawsuit "baseless and opportunistic," pointing to the suspicious timing of the filing after Rocket closed the Mr. Cooper deal and after former UWM wholesale executive Mike Fawaz announced a UWM partnership. The legal battle reveals deeper tensions around competitive poaching and the enforceability of non-solicit covenants in an AI-enabled origination landscape. Originators watching this case should understand that aggressive borrower acquisition strategies now carry measurable legal and financial risk, particularly when targeting seasoned loan portfolios. The Two Harbors/CrossCountry/UWM merger battle intensifies as shareholders prepare for the May 19 vote, with UWM accusing Two Harbors of "smoke and mirrors" over dividend announcements and valuation messaging. CrossCountry matched UWM's $12-per-share offer earlier this week, pivoting the contest to governance, servicing economics, and how deal value is being communicated to shareholders rather than pure dollar amounts. The rhetoric has grown sharper as both sides trade pointed statements, suggesting underlying strategic concerns about servicing rights, MSR valuations, and post-merger integration risk. For mortgage servicing professionals, the outcome will reshape competitive positioning in the servicing sector and may signal how much acquirers are willing to pay for mortgage-backed loan portfolio rights going forward. This high-stakes proxy battle is essentially a referendum on servicing viability at current interest rate environments and borrower prepayment assumptions. Ginnie Mae prepayment speeds slowed meaningfully in April as refinancing activity dried up, with VA loans continuing to prepay materially faster than FHA loans thanks to VA streamline efficiency. Servicer dispersion remained wide, with firms like Rocket generating faster prepayments while regional banks and depositories produced stickier collateral reflecting differing customer bases and servicing strategies. This bifurcation means extension risk is real for investors holding slower-paying pools while seasoning and borrower composition become critical valuation drivers. Mortgage-backed security investors are increasingly focused on collateral selection and specified pool characteristics to manage convexity, knowing that broad refinancing waves are off the table for the foreseeable future. For lenders holding long-duration MSR portfolios, these dynamics underscore the importance of strategic servicer partnerships and granular borrower-level analytics. Real wages have turned negative after inflation adjustment, a troubling signal for consumer spending resilience even as retail sales and unemployment figures suggest near-term economic stability. Small business confidence remains subdued while existing home sales continue lagging long-term norms, hinting that housing affordability strain is beginning to filter through buyer behavior despite headline economic strength. The disconnect between positive labor market data and weakening real wage growth suggests consumers are becoming increasingly price-sensitive on groceries, gasoline, and housing costs. Fed policymakers now face a complex scenario: persistent inflation paired with potential growth slowdown leaves little room to cut rates without risking renewed price acceleration. Mortgage originators should prepare messaging that emphasizes long-term commitment to borrowers facing affordability headwinds, positioning purchase and rate-and-term refinance strategies around life planning rather than purely rate-dependent decisions. **Locking vs Floating** Range breakouts at one-year highs change the calculus entirely for lock-versus-float decision-making. While a peaceful Iran resolution would theoretically support lower rates, the timeline is unknowable and yields are now testing resistance at 4.66 with floors at 4.05 and 4.12. When volatility hits this magnitude, traditional float strategies lose credibility because borrowers cannot predict when market normalization occurs. The best guidance is to counsel clients on worst-case scenarios rather than base-case recovery, effectively recommending locks for committed timelines. **Today's Events** NY Fed Manufacturing (May): 19.60 vs. 7.5 forecast, 11.00 previous Industrial Production (April): 0.7% vs. 0.3% forecast, -0.5% previous **Bond Pricing** **UMBS 30 yr** | Coupon | Price | Intra-Day Change | |5.0|97.41|-0.72| |5.5|99.72|-0.49| |6.0|101.56|-0.37| **GNMA 30 yr** | Coupon | Price | Intra-Day Change | |5.0|98.09|-0.74| |5.5|100.27|-0.29| |6.0|101.57|-0.14| **Treasuries** | Term | Yield | Price | Intra-Day Yield Change | Market Data
Mortgage Today (AM) - 05/15/26 {{catlist}}
May 15, 2026
READ MORE **WTMS Blog Today = What's up in Mortgage Today (AM) - 05/15/2026** The afternoon bond rally collapsed on Thursday, leaving mortgage securities and Treasuries sharply weaker heading into Friday. UMBS 30-year prices fell across all coupons, with the 5.0 coupon dropping 44 basis points intraday and the 6.0 coupon falling 20 basis points. GNMA 30-year securities posted similar losses, though slightly smaller in magnitude across the board. The 10-year Treasury yield jumped 65 basis points intraday to 4.55%, signaling a broad selloff in fixed-income markets. Geopolitical tensions and war-related headlines continue to inject volatility into bond pricing with no predictable pattern. The weakness accelerated across the entire yield curve, with even shorter-duration Treasuries posting significant losses. The 2-year yield gained 42 basis points while the 30-year climbed 66 basis points intraday, reflecting broad-based selling pressure. This flattening dynamic puts pressure on mortgage origination margins as the 10-year remains the primary pricing benchmark. Secondary market lenders will need to adjust pricing to lock clients facing uncertainty, likely compressing bid-ask spreads. Current volatility levels suggest clients should avoid making lock-float decisions based on short-term headlines. Short-term rate volatility driven by geopolitical events creates an impossible environment for mechanical lock-float strategies. The unpredictable nature of war-related headlines means traditional support and resistance levels are temporarily unreliable. However, longer-term analysis suggests that a potential peace deal could provide meaningful downward pressure on yields from current levels. Borrowers who can tolerate near-term volatility may benefit from floating locks, but only with clear risk tolerance discussions. The elevated uncertainty argues for locking clients now rather than waiting for a clarity that may not arrive soon. Treasury intraday pricing reflected substantial losses across all maturities, with price declines ranging from 99.641 to 94.709 depending on term. The 10-year Treasury at 4.55% represents a notable move higher, placing it near resistance levels that have capped yields in recent weeks. The steeper 30-year yield at 5.096% continues to reflect inflation expectations and Fed policy uncertainty. Mortgage-backed securities followed Treasury weakness but did not decouple significantly, preserving relative value relationships. The MBS-Treasury spread remains stable despite absolute price weakness, a positive signal for mortgage lender economics. **Locking vs Floating** War headlines continue driving volatile price swings in bonds with no predictable schedule or direction. Building a rational lock-float strategy is nearly impossible when geopolitical catalysts can move yields 50+ basis points in hours. Focus on the bigger picture: a peace agreement would likely bring meaningful rate relief from where yields stand today. In the near term, accept that volatility will persist and position clients accordingly with conservative lock recommendations. The intraday ceiling and floor framework for 10-year yields remains your best tool for tracking bond market momentum beyond daily noise. **Bond Pricing** **UMBS 30 yr** | Coupon | Price | Intra-Day Change | | 5.0 | 97.69 | -0.44 | | 5.5 | 99.92 | -0.29 | | 6.0 | 101.74 | -0.2 | **GNMA 30 yr** | Coupon | Price | Intra-Day Change | | 5.0 | 98.46 | -0.37 | | 5.5 | 100.38 | -0.17 | | 6.0 | 101.54 | -0.17 | **Treasuries** | Term | Yield | Price | Intra-Day Yield Change | | 2 yr | 4.064 | 99.641 | 0.042 | | 3 yr | 4.113 | 98.286 | 0.052 | | 5 yr | 4.213 | 98.489 | 0.062 | | 7 yr | 4.377 | 99.24 | 0.065 | | 10 yr | 4.55 | 96.618 | 0.065 | | 30 yr | 5.096 | 94.709 | 0.066 | Market Data
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