FHFA’s Pulte tapped for acting director of national intelligence

Federal Housing Finance Agency Director Bill Pulte won the White House’s favor by acting as an attack dog for the administration, using his agency’s data to target President Trump’s political enemies with fraud allegations, though those efforts have not withstood judicial scrutiny.

Uncommonly Uneventful Day

Uncommonly Uneventful Day

No one will accuse us of clickbait titles today, or even clickbait analysis. There’s just not much to say. Unlike the average trading day of late, bonds held inside a very narrow range AND didn’t visibly respond to any major Iran war news (and the typical oil price volatility that follows). Oil prices definitely moved a bit, and bond yields generally followed, but the range was well inside yesterday’s. For a few minutes, it looked like bonds were going to struggle with the job openings data, but they quickly found their footing and drifted sideways into the close.

Market Movement Recap

09:36 AM Modestly stronger overnight but nearly unchanged now with MBS up only 1 tick (.03). 10yr down 1bp at 4.446

10:12 AM Some selling after JOLTS data, but stabilizing now. MBS down 1 tick (.03) and 10yr down just over half a bp at 4.45

Yields End Higher Despite Some Mid-Day Solace

Yields End Higher Despite Some Mid-Day Solace

As has been almost constantly the case for the past few months, today’s ebbs and flows in the bond market were tightly tied to the Iran war news cycle. Yields spiked after AM headlines suggested Iran was not interested in negotiating as long as fighting continues between Israel and Lebanon. Bonds bounced back in a friendlier direction after mid-day news that Trump would talk to Netanyahu about de-escalating. Nothing conclusive came from that conversation by the 3pm ET close and 10yr yields remained roughly 3bps higher on the day. Tuesday’s slate of potential volatility receives an additional (though mild) layer of complication from the job openings data at 10am ET.

Econ Data / Events

Construction spending (Apr)

0.4% vs 0.2% f’cast, 0.6% prev

ISM Manufacturing Employment (May)

48.6 vs — f’cast, 46.4 prev

ISM Manufacturing PMI (May)

54.0 vs 53 f’cast, 52.7 prev

ISM Mfg Prices Paid (May)

82.1 vs 85.5 f’cast, 84.6 prev

Market Movement Recap

09:19 AM moderately weaker overnight with additional losses after latest war headlines regarding Iran breaking off talks. MBS down 6 ticks (.19) and 10yr up 3.6bps at 4.475

09:36 AM MBS are now down 3/8ths of a point on the day and 10 ticks (.31) from intraday highs. 10s are up 6bps at 4.497.

12:24 PM Holding near weakest levels. MBS down 14 ticks (.44) and 10yr up nearly 7bps at 4.507

02:02 PM rebounding on news about Trump/Netanyahu talks. 10yr still up 3bps at 4.47 and MBS down a quarter point

Rates Pull Back Slightly

Following last week’s relatively strong move to the lowest levels since May 14th, mortgage rates bounced slightly higher to start the news week. The move followed a clear shift in the Iran war news cycle with morning headlines citing Iranian officials saying the peace negotiation were effectively tabled as long as hostilities remained between Israel and Lebanon. As a refresher, the Iran war is bad for rates primarily due to the actual and implied impact on inflation due to higher fuel costs. Bonds dictate rates and bonds hate inflation. There was an immediate and moderately sharp reaction in both oil prices and bonds right when this morning’s news came out. Fortunately, the damage was fairly mild for mortgage rates with the average lender moving up 0.04% to 6.60% for a top tier 30yr fixed scenario. This is still 0.10% lower than the most recent high of 5.70% seen on May 19th.

Non-QM, HELOC, AI, LOS, eVault Tools; Gov’t Loan Program Changes; Investor Thoughts

While M&A continues (the latest example being Berkshire Hathaway buying homebuilder Taylor Morrison for $8.5 billion!), I find myself in San Juan Capistrano at the Insellerate Experience Summit but keeping an eye out for returning swallows. Lenders are keeping an eye out for loans: Although lenders generally had a good April and May, pipelines for June fundings and beyond appear to be down significantly. Insellerate’s Summit is focused on AI and tech. Mortgage has spent decades layering technology onto a system that still costs too much, moves too slowly, and frustrates nearly everyone involved, says Figure CEO Michael Tannenbaum. In an exclusive Q&A for Chrisman Commentary, he explains why he believes most mortgage technology has failed to solve the industry’s core problems, how Figure is trying to rebuild parts of housing finance from the infrastructure level up, and why Wall Street increasingly views the company less like a lender and more like a financial network. The conversation also touches on AI hype, blockchain skepticism, the psychology of running a newly public company, and why mortgage may be entering its most important transition since the rise of securitization itself. (Today’s podcast can be found here and this week’s ‘casts are sponsored by Experian and the Experian Verify Hub. The platform brings manual submissions in-house and consolidates post-submission activities into a single environment, aiming to provide more streamlined access, faster insights, and a more cohesive user experience. Today’s has an interview with Movement Mortgage’s COO Lyra Waggoner on breaking into mortgage banking, what it actually takes to run a lender day-to-day, and thinking differently about building careers, culture, and long-term success.)