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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) - 04/14/26 {{catlist}}
April 14, 2026
READ MORE WTMS Blog Today = What's up in Mortgage Today (AM) - 04/14/2026 Bonds ignore a massive beat in inflation data, as diplomatic hopes in Iran negotiations keep risk sentiment alive and energy costs anchored. The 10-year Treasury is holding around 4.29%, barely moved despite PPI coming in significantly cooler than economists expected. March producer prices rose just 0.5% month-over-month versus forecasts of 1.1%, while core PPI advanced only 0.1% versus the expected 0.4%, signaling that underlying wholesale inflation is cooling despite war-related oil volatility. Markets are effectively in a holding pattern, with futures pricing in no change to Fed policy through year-end. This muted reaction tells you everything: traders are more focused on geopolitics and oil than hard data. The lack of volatility has been a gift to mortgage investors, as embedded optionality outperforms when rates stay range-bound. Agency MBS have added another 6 basis points of excess return in recent weeks and fully erased losses from the onset of Middle East tensions, a remarkable recovery aided by declining rate volatility and steady Treasury demand. Current coupon spreads remain compressed but within familiar ranges, leaving investors focused on carry and liquidity rather than directional bets. Higher coupon, lower pay-up specified pools continue to offer relative value compared to investment-grade corporates. For mortgage originators, this stability means lock-in opportunities without sharp repricing risk. Existing home sales fell 3.6% month-over-month in March to 3.98 million units, pressured by elevated mortgage rates, higher prices, limited inventory, and softer job growth at the start of spring buying season. The NFIB optimism index dropped to 95.8 in March, marking its lowest reading in a year and well below expectations. These demand headwinds align with the broader constraint on origination volume, though diplomacy signals from Iran talks are helping equity markets rally and reduce fear of further rate spikes. The combination of cooler inflation, slowing sales, and recession concerns creates a three-way tug on long-term rates that keeps Treasury yields anchored. Energy prices remain the wildcard—if oil stabilizes near current levels, inflation stays manageable. Policy dynamics continue to reshape mortgage spreads more than benchmark rates, according to capital markets analysis. Policy signals around MBS interventions, institutional ownership debates, and credit regulation are exerting subtle but powerful effects on execution and hedging strategies across the industry. The $1.8 trillion annual budget deficit remains a background headwind for rates, though its immediate impact is overshadowed by geopolitical headlines. Understanding these policy nuances helps originators distinguish between noise and signal, avoiding costly overreactions to headlines without structural market consequences. Treasury valuations remain fairly attractive relative to corporates, with short-duration exposure in high demand as investors prioritize capital preservation. The 15-year MBS sector is now screening as the cheapest on an OAS basis, presenting an opportunity for investors hunting relative value. Lower-coupon pools benefit from carry, while higher-coupon paper offers some relief from further curve steepening. Agency MBS continue to look fairly valued, not stretched, which supports a steady-handed approach rather than aggressive positioning in an uncertain environment. Investors should watch for any narrowing in spreads as oil prices moderate further. Risk management frameworks favor disciplined positioning until macro clarity emerges on growth, inflation, and Fed policy post-Powell transition. Markets are pricing no Fed rate changes through year-end, despite inflation surprises cutting both ways—cooler core readings suggest no urgency to hike, yet elevated energy and geopolitical risks keep terminal rate expectations elevated. For originators, this means the 4.25%–4.35% zone in 10-year yields remains a logical reference range until diplomatic developments firm up or dissipate entirely. Lock triggers at 4.34% or 4.40% work for risk-takers, while conservative shops should maintain defenses until yields decisively break below 4.30%. Locking vs Floating Market momentum in the 10-year remains flat compared to March, creating more room for different lock and float strategies. Risk-takers have a reasonable case for setting lock triggers at 4.34% to 4.40% in yield terms, capturing any upside surprise if geopolitics escalate further. The risk-averse camp sees no compelling reason to lower defenses until Treasury yields convincingly break below 4.30% and hold there. The key insight: yield ceilings and floors matter more than intraday MBS moves when tracking bigger-picture bond market direction. Today's Events Core PPI m/m (Mar): 0.1% vs 0.5% forecast, 0.5% previous Core PPI y/y (Mar): 3.8% vs 4.1% forecast, 3.9% previous PPI m/m (Mar): 0.5% vs 1.1% forecast, 0.7% previous PPI y/y (Mar): 4.0% vs 4.6% forecast, 3.4% previous Bond Pricing UMBS 30 yr | Coupon | Price | Intra-Day Change | |5.0|99.26|0.10| |5.5|100.98|0.06| |6.0|102.30|0.04| GNMA 30 yr | Coupon | Price | Intra-Day Change | |5.0|99.71|-0.09| |5.5|101.09|0.07| |6.0|101.98|-0.02| Treasuries | Term | Yield | Price | Intra-Day Yield Change | |2 yr|3.774|100.193|0.000| |3 yr|3.789|99.188|-0.003| |5 yr|3.902|99.878|-0.011| |7 yr|4.084|101.003|-0.010| |10 yr|4.282|98.731|-0.006| |30 yr|4.887|97.852|-0.009| Market Data
Mortgage Today (PM) - 04/13/26 {{catlist}}
April 13, 2026
READ MORE WTMS Blog Today = What's up in Mortgage Today (PM) - 04/13/2026 De-escalation headlines triggered a sharp reversal in the bond market this afternoon, lifting mortgage-backed securities off weekend lows as geopolitical risk sentiment shifted dramatically. The 10-year Treasury yield fell 1.8 basis points to 4.297 percent by late trading, with UMBS 5.0 coupons gaining 18 basis points to close near 99.15. Overnight weakness that followed failed peace talks gave way to optimism when midday reports suggested Iran might abandon its enrichment program and negotiations remained viable. This whipsaw pattern underscores how sensitive the market remains to war-related headlines, even as the bond market's overall trajectory since March has stayed relatively flat compared to historical volatility. Mortgage originators saw pricing tighten into the close, improving purchase power for customers locked into higher rate scenarios. Existing home sales disappointed on the month, falling to 3.98 million units against a 4.06 million forecast and down from 4.09 million in February. This data confirms weakening buyer demand in the real estate market despite modest rate relief, signaling headwinds for origination volume heading into spring selling season. Lower home sales directly impact mortgage pipeline activity, as fewer transactions mean fewer purchase loans flowing through the system. Combined with persistent affordability pressures, originators should expect continued chop in volumes unless rates sustain meaningful declines. The economic calendar ahead will be critical to watch for signs of demand stabilization. GNMA securities outperformed UMBS on the day, with 5.0 coupons climbing 21 basis points to 99.83 while maintaining stronger relative value across the curve. The government-guaranteed pool structure continues to attract investors seeking AAA credit quality, especially in periods of elevated geopolitical uncertainty. UMBS 5.5 coupons rose 17 basis points to 100.92, while 6.0 coupons lagged with only 9 basis points of gains, indicating a steeper rally in shorter coupons. These pricing moves confirm that de-escalation sentiment lifted demand across the entire mortgage stack, though depth remains uneven. Originators holding inventory benefited from intraday value, though hedging effectiveness varied based on coupon concentration. The Treasury curve flattened in the afternoon, with the 2-year yield down 2.1 basis points to 3.774 percent while the 10-year fell 2.7 basis points to 4.289 percent. Mid-curve Treasuries—the 5-year and 7-year—experienced the largest intraday moves, each declining roughly 2.7 basis points, suggesting investors repriced duration risk on the geopolitical reversal. The 30-year bond was notably weaker, falling only 1.1 basis points to 4.897 percent, reflecting concerns about inflation stickiness in the longer duration. For mortgage originators, the flatter curve pressures margin capture on refinance activity since the rate decline was concentrated at intermediate tenors. This technical setup suggests lock/float strategies should emphasize shorter-term lock triggers rather than waiting for steeper declines. Locking vs Floating Risk-tolerant borrowers have room to play for lower rates with lock triggers pegged at 4.34 percent or 4.40 percent in 10-year yield terms, given how flat markets have remained since March. Conservative borrowers have no tactical reason to lower their guard until the 10-year breaks decisively below 4.30 percent, as support levels remain intact above current trading. The wide range between these trigger levels reflects the market's genuine uncertainty around geopolitical outcomes and whether today's optimism will hold. Originators should communicate that neither aggressive floats nor immediate locks are forced decisions at current levels. Strategy should remain dictated by client risk tolerance and pipeline composition rather than chasing intraday moves. Today's Events Existing home sales (Mar): 3.98M vs 4.06M forecast, 4.09M prior 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 | | 2yr | 3.774 | 100.192 | -0.021 | | 3yr | 3.792 | 99.18 | -0.028 | | 5yr | 3.913 | 99.83 | -0.026 | | 7yr | 4.094 | 100.944 | -0.027 | | 10yr | 4.289 | 98.679 | -0.027 | | 30yr | 4.897 | 97.697 | -0.011 | Market Data
Mortgage Today (AM) - 04/13/26 {{catlist}}
April 13, 2026
READ MORE WTMS Blog Today = What's up in Mortgage Today (AM) - 04/13/2026 Oil surging past $100 per barrel after Trump ordered a blockade of the Strait of Hormuz sent bond markets spiraling lower this morning, with the 10-year Treasury yield jumping 3.3 basis points to 4.317% as inflation concerns outweighed softer-than-feared consumer price data. The geopolitical shock followed failed peace negotiations with Iran over the weekend, threatening to worsen an already-strained energy market where 20% of global oil flows through the critical Persian Gulf chokepoint. Brent crude rocketed 7.3% to above $102 per barrel in reaction to Trump's restrictions on vessels calling at Iranian ports, amplifying recession fears and triggering a broad selloff in bonds worldwide. Even with early-morning weakness, Agency mortgage-backed securities steadied near Friday's close as traders digested whether this oil spike represents negotiating leverage or a genuine, sustained inflation driver. The real question for originators remains whether higher crude prices will bleed into broader inflation expectations or fade as temporary, geopolitical noise. March inflation data delivered mixed signals that should have supported bonds, yet they fell anyway. Core consumer prices rose just 0.2% month-over-month—below the 0.3% forecast—suggesting underlying inflation is cooling to multi-month lows. The headline figure jumped 0.9% month-over-month, the sharpest monthly increase since 2022, but this surge was almost entirely attributable to energy prices spiking. Year-over-year, core CPI printed at 2.6% versus a 2.7% forecast, while headline CPI came in right at the expected 3.3%. The problem is that markets care less about what inflation *was* than what inflation *will be* if crude stays expensive, pushing up fuel, food, and transportation costs for everyday consumers. Money markets are now pricing in less than a one-in-five chance of a Fed rate cut by year-end, a stark reversal from cut expectations just weeks ago. The Strait of Hormuz blockade threat has global bond investors spooked because energy shocks historically translate into stagflation—slower growth *and* higher prices simultaneously. Iran has already been selectively blockading the strait since the February attack from the U.S. and Israel, allowing only certain ships through while charging tolls up to $2 million each. Crude exports from Iran rose to 1.9 million barrels per day in March, up 100,000 barrels daily from prior months, but the impact on global supply chains is being felt through higher shipping costs and insurance premiums. At least 22 vessels have been attacked in recent weeks, with 10 crew members killed and roughly 800 commercial vessels now stranded—half of them oil tankers. For mortgage originators, every 1% rise in oil prices typically adds 3 to 5 basis points of upward pressure on Treasury yields within weeks, making rate locks increasingly valuable for borrowers on the fence. Goldman Sachs kicked off earnings season with disappointing results, with shares down 4.5% in premarket trading due to a revenue miss in fixed-income, currency, and commodities trading. The broader S&P 500 was poised for a 0.6% opening loss, though mortgage bonds showed surprising resilience as some investors viewed the oil spike as temporary negotiating pressure rather than a fundamental economic shock. Strategists at Morgan Stanley and Swiss Life Asset Management noted that investors see the blockade as leverage in discussions rather than a permanent disruption, keeping equity and credit markets from imploding entirely. Agency MBS 30-year 5.5% coupons held near 100.80, down just 7–8 basis points from Friday's close despite the volatility. This resilience could signal that the mortgage market is absorbing the oil shock as priced-in inflation rather than repricing for structural rate-regime change. FundingShield released Q1 2026 fraud analytics showing 43.72% of a $106.7 billion loan portfolio carried material wire and title defects, with CPL discrepancies impacting 43.49% of transactions. The report underscores vulnerabilities in closing workflows just as lenders increasingly adopt AI-driven automation and embedded verification solutions to cut fraud losses. Dark Matter Technologies rolled out Ask Aiva, a conversational AI query tool allowing loan officers to ask data questions in plain English and receive reasoning behind the answers. Several lenders and vendors announced compliance and operational upgrades: PHH Mortgage rebranded as Onity Mortgage Corporation, AmeriHome updated rate sheet formatting effective April 20, and Newrez began accepting loans using the new Uniform Appraisal Dataset 3.6 format. These operational shifts suggest the industry is moving toward standardized, tech-enabled pipelines that should improve origination efficiency and reduce costly compliance errors during market stress. Existing Home Sales for March are due mid-morning today and will reflect buyer demand *before* the Iran conflict and recent mortgage rate increases hit the market in earnest. Purchase applications have already been subdued due to affordability constraints, so today's report likely shows continued weakness despite lower sales volumes than pre-pandemic levels. Fed officials including New York President Williams and Governor Waller are scheduled to speak this week; their tone on inflation and rate policy could shift market expectations if they signal heightened concern about oil-driven price pressures. The bond market is now tracking a 4.40% ceiling and 4.30% floor on the 10-year yield as the key technical levels defining near-term mortgage-rate momentum. Risk-averse originators should keep defenses tight until yields convincingly break below 4.30%, while risk-takers may find value near 4.40% if the geopolitical situation de-escalates. Locking vs Floating March inflation cooled in the core components despite headline energy spikes, but markets are treating the oil-driven spike as a harbinger of broader price acceleration if crude remains elevated. The 10-year yield's 4.40% ceiling and 4.30% floor define the near-term range; traders are cautious that renewed energy shocks could push yields higher, making it prudent for borrowers to lock if they cannot tolerate additional rate moves. Conversely, if the Hormuz blockade resolves quickly and oil prices recede, yields could drift lower, rewarding floaters who waited. For originators managing pipeline risk, the binary geopolitical outcome makes traditional hedging more critical than rate-timing bets. Today's Events March Existing Home Sales (mid-morning) Federal Reserve speakers: New York President Williams, Governor Waller Bond Pricing UMBS 30 yr | Coupon | Price | Intra-Day Change | | 5.0 | 99.00 | 99.69 | | 5.5 | 100.80 | 100.95 | | 6.0 | 102.19 | 101.84 | GNMA 30 yr | Coupon | Price | Intra-Day Change | Treasuries | Term | Yield | Price | Intra-Day Yield Change | Market Data
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