Mortgage rates fell on Tuesday following a downbeat Retail Sales report. At 0.05%, it was the largest single-day drop since the uncommonly big 0.15% drop on January 9th. This also takes the average 30yr fixed rate to 6.11%, easily below its recently narrow range of 6.15-6.20. The bonds that drive mortgage rates are always tuned in to various economic reports for movement cues. Weaker data = lower rates, all else equal. Retail Sales is hit and miss when it comes to causing rate volatility. The undisputed champion among economic reports is tomorrow’s jobs report at 8:30am ET. Several recent rate rallies have been slightly larger than they otherwise might have been because the market may be positioning for a downbeat jobs number. If it is weaker than expected, there’s certainly room for the rate rally to continue, but if the report shows resilience, rates would likely bounce back higher.
Tag Archives: mortgage fraud news
Servicing, QC, Workflow, Non-Agency Products; LOs Using Tools Effectively; STRATMOR Tech Survey
Products, Services, and Software for Brokers and Lenders There’s a reason $5.99 feels different than $6.00. Behavioral economists call it the “left-digit effect.” When it comes to mortgage rates, borrowers just call it a reason to refinance. Optimal Blue’s January Market Advantage report shows falling rates crossing that psychological threshold – and refinance demand responded fast. Total mortgage lock volume rose 16 percent month over month and 36 percent year over year, driven by a 50 percent month-over-month jump in rate-and-term refinances, now running more than four times higher than last January. The report also points to improving credit quality and affordability, alongside renewed momentum in the secondary market, including rising MSR values, increased securitization activity, and expanding investor participation. Published monthly, Market Advantage delivers direct-source insight lenders can use to make smarter capacity, pricing, and capital markets decisions. Download the complimentary report here. Manual “stare and compare” underwriting has been the industry norm for decades, but it comes with rising operational costs. As volume increases, manual verification drives up headcount, slows turn times and introduces greater risk of human error. Exception-based underwriting offers a more scalable approach by using automation to validate income, credit, assets and data consistency upfront, freeing up underwriters to only focus on true discrepancies. The result is fewer touches, faster decisions and a more resilient underwriting operation. Read the full blog to explore how exception-based workflows can help lenders break free from manual reviews and scale more efficiently.
Bonds Taking a Pre-NFP Lead-Off
Last Thursday, we discussed the paradox of a rally in the present moment being driven by future data. More specifically, the three downbeat labor market reports increased the stakes for tomorrow’s jobs report. Depending on trends and trading positions, risks can be asymmetrical. A trader who expected higher rates might have only seen a modest increase in yields if the data was stronger, and a bigger decrease in yields if the data was weaker. The market already rejected a break above 4.30% in the 10yr. Then multiple reports suggested additional buying and additional risk of a weak jobs report. The choice to move back toward a familiar recent range (4.1-4.2) became clear with this morning’s weak retail sales data. Just be aware that if Wednesday’s jobs report is stronger, yields could pop right back over 4.20.
Housing bill passes House with community bank riders
A housing bill that already passed the Senate cleared the House Monday evening, but included bipartisan community banking provisions that have already raised objections in the upper chamber.
CFPB blocks GAO investigators in layoff report
The Government Accountability Office was tasked with investigating the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s stop-work order, but CFPB officials refused to meet with or provide information to Congress’ investigative arm.
GOP senators push FEMA to scrap Risk Rating 2.0
The letter claims the flood insurance premium pricing change has made the product unaffordable, resulting in a large drop off in the number of policies.
Warsh call for Fed-Treasury accord stirs debate in $30 trillion bond market
Warsh has voiced support for overhauling the relationship between the two institutions with a new version of an agreement struck in 1951.
Title company settles RESPA JV referral claims for $1M
State regulators and attorneys general could be picking up the gauntlet on anti-kickback provision enforcement, especially in the mid-Atlantic states.
Early Volatility And a Decent Recovery
Early Volatility And a Decent Recovery
Bonds lost ground in the overnight session after Chinese regulators cautioned banks against holding US Treasuries. That move was short-lived and more than fully erased before 9am ET. Part of the bounce back can be attributed to a newswire quoting Hassett saying we should expect slightly lower jobs numbers. Some may view this as telegraphing advanced knowledge of Wednesday’s numbers, but that would be highly unlikely based on the typical protocol (Council of Economic Advisors Chair typically gets advance notice the afternoon before a key economic report). It was also arguably taken out of context. The rest of the day was uneventful, sideways, and slightly stronger, with bonds ultimately ending at modestly lower yields. MBS were flat.
Econ Data / Events
NY Fed Consumer Inflation Expectations
3.1 vs 3.4 prev
Market Movement Recap
10:15 AM Modestly weaker overnight but mostly erased at 8:20am. 10yr up half a bp at 4.218 and MBS down 2 ticks (.06).
02:27 PM Best levels of the day. MBS up 1 tick (.03) and 10yr down 1.3bps at 4.200
Analytics, Servicing, AI, Warehouse, Doctor Products; MBS Trends: Credit Scores Matter
Lenders are always analyzing automation for parts of the manufacturing process, and industry vet and STRATMOR Senior Advisor Sue Woodard has her thoughts about last week’s MBA conference. “The IMB has always been a barometer for where this industry actually is, not where slide decks say it should be. This year, the signal was unmistakable. The mood is more optimistic than it has been in years, attendance is strong, and conversations have shifted from survival to execution. But that optimism is disciplined. Lenders are encouraged, not complacent, and the challenges in front of us are well understood. What stood out most in conversations across the conference floor was not a single technology, product, or policy headline. It was a shared recognition that the industry is at an inflection point. The next phase will be defined less by bold proclamations and more by focused decisions, thoughtful adoption, and follow-through. (Today’s podcast can be found here and this week’s ‘casts are Sponsored by Cenlar. Cenlar supports lenders and investors with scalable, best-in-class loan servicing built for today’s complex market. From compliance to customer experience, Cenlar helps portfolios perform better, borrowers stay supported, and servicers focus on growth. We’re proud to partner with a true industry leader. Hear an interview with Experian’s Joy Mina and Ken Tromer on how to access reliable income, employment, and asset data upfront in the origination process, enabling more precise prequalification decisions while reducing friction and improving the borrower’s early-stage experience.)
