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.)

Weaker Start as War News Cycle Shifts

Last week’s focus for war-related headlines involved various attempts to hone in on just how close we were to a confirmed preliminary peace deal. The results were predictable with bonds moving to their lowest yields in weeks. The shoe is very much on the other foot to start the new week with headlines saying Iran is pulling out of peace talks until the Israel/Lebanon fighting ends. In addition, the IRGC is said to be taking control of diplomacy and threatening to re-block the strait. With that, 10yr yields jumped back up near the highest levels in over a week and MBS dropped a quick 3/8ths of a point.

Markets Were Skeptical of Mid-Day Peace Headlines and That Was a Good Instinct

Markets Were Skeptical of Mid-Day Peace Headlines and That Was a Good Instinct

A few hours into the trading session, newswires came out that seemed to offer the best hopes of a peace deal yet. Specifically, it said that Trump was in the situation room to make a final determination on the peace deal and that issues required for the infamous one page memo had already been agreed upon. Markets were surprisingly cautious about reading too much into that, although it briefly took yields to their lowest levels of the week. By the end of the day, we learned that no decision had been made and negotiations weren’t any farther along than already assumed based on the week’s earlier “close to signing the memo” news. Bonds faded back toward opening levels to end the day roughly unchanged. Next week brings more headline-watching as well as the month’s biggest slate of domestic econ data.

Econ Data / Events

Wholesale Inventories

0.5 vs 0.8 f’cast, 1.3 prev

Chicago PMI

62.7 vs 50.5 f’cast

Market Movement Recap

08:33 AM Fairly flat overnight and little-changed to start. MBS up 2 ticks (.06) and 10yr unchanged at 4.445

10:57 AM Gaining ground after Trump “final decision pending” headlines. MBS up 3 ticks (.09) and 10yr down 1bp at 4.436

02:24 PM Fairly flat. MBS up an eighth and 10yr down half a bp at 4.438

Mortgage Rates Set to End Week Much Lower

While there are still a few hours left in the trading day, it’s a near certainty that this week will end with mortgage rates at meaningfully lower levels compared to last Friday. Today is only adding modestly to that trend, but that makes it the 8th straight business day where rates have either held steady or moved lower. On that note, it’s possibly worth considering that these sorts of winning streaks have definite life spans. We’ve certainly seen stretches of more than 10 business days without any upward movement in rates, but they’re very rare. Even then, if the streak were to end on Monday or Tuesday, it may only be a temporary blip before more improvement. The bigger-picture issue remains the state of the Iran war. If it officially ends, rates likely have more room to improve. If hostilities re-escalate, rates could move back up into the recently higher range. [thirtyyearmortgagerates]

Inventory Builds as New Home Sales Cool in April

New home sales pulled back in April after stronger readings in the prior two months. According to the latest Census Bureau and HUD data, sales of new single-family homes fell to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 622,000 , down 6.2% from March and 11.3% from a year earlier. Inventory moved slightly higher, with the number of new homes for sale rising to 489,000 , up 1.7% from March but still 2.2% below April 2025 levels. At the current sales pace, that left months’ supply at 9.4 months , up from 8.7 months in March and 8.6 months one year ago. Pricing was mixed. The median sales price climbed to $422,500 , up 8.0% from March and 2.2% from a year earlier. The average sales price ticked up to $508,800 , a modest 0.7% monthly gain, though it remained 1.1% below last year’s level.
Sales (MoM): -6.2%
Sales (YoY): -11.3%
Inventory (MoM): +1.7%
Inventory (YoY): -2.2%
Months’ Supply: 9.4 (up from 8.7 prior month; 8.6 YoY)
Median Price: $422,500
Average Price: $508,800