Bonds came into the domestic session in weaker territory after steady selling in Europe. The resulting yields were ultimately a few bps higher than the nearest technical ceiling in the 10yr (4.34), which is also the lower boundary of a “gap” created by the big overnight rally on February 25th. Technicians could view this movement two ways. On one hand, a break above the technical ceiling could cause concern about additional selling. Conversely, a move back into a gap could be viewed as a cue to buy again. Interestingly enough, bonds began rallying right at the official start of the domestic session. Is this enough to conclude that the “fill the gap” crowd is in charge? Probably not. In a sideways range, the typical pattern involves 1-3 days of gains followed by 1-3 days of weakness. This is still a generally sideways market that’s waiting for more serious motivation.
Tag Archives: mortgage fraud news
Customer Experience, Internal Audit, Pre-Approval Tools; CFPB Still Here; FHA, USDA Changes
This week I head to San Diego for MCT Exchange 2025, and my email has been heating up. “Rob, are you hearing about a big jump in lock volume last week?” Yes… it may not be just you. As they say, a rising tide raises all boats. “Rob, are you hearing about an uptick in FHA delinquencies?” Yes, absolutely, and for quite some time. These high margin, low down payment loans are seeing an increase in problems. “Rob, are you hearing that the CFPB is back up and running?” Yes, at least parts of it: regs, monitoring, the complaint function; less so supervision and enforcement. Speaking of which, Mortgage Musings author and attorney Brian Levy hopes someone gets his message in a bottle with his latest Musing doubling as an open letter to CFPB leadership containing many suggestions for mortgage regulatory reform. “Rob, are you hearing that LOs need videos to reach millennial home buyers?” Perhaps… I know that in today’s Mortgages for Millennials, Kristin Messerli and Robbie Chrisman are joined by guest Ralph Remy of National MI: “Trust in financial institutions is plummeting, and YouTube has emerged as the go-to platform for homebuying education.” (Today’s podcast can be found here and this week’s is sponsored by ICE. ICE offers an interconnected digital mortgage ecosystem to help clients improve productivity, reduce costs, and deliver a meaningful customer experience. Today’s has an Interview with TRUE’s Steve Butler on how instant loan intelligence is revolutionizing borrower engagement. Lenders who fail to adopt AI-driven processes risk becoming obsolete.)
Mortgage Rates Modestly Higher on Average, But Some Lenders Are Lower
One of the key principles of mortgage rate movement has to do with the frequency of mortgage rate changes. Specifically, mortgage lenders prefer to update rates once per day. This is notable because mortgage rates are based on bonds, and bonds are constantly trading. The compromise is that mortgage lenders will indeed change rates more than once a day, in cases where bonds move enough to force their hands. This concept is relevant today because it explains why rates are both higher and lower, depending on the lender in question. Yesterday, bonds were moving in such a way that prompted some lenders to raise rates in the afternoon. Other lenders held steady and simply raised rates this morning instead. Lenders who raised rates yesterday were fairly close to the same levels this morning, and many of them were actually slightly lower. On overage, though, this morning’s rates were higher than yesterday’s. To make matters just a bit more confusing, we’re once again seeing enough market movement for lenders to make mid-day changes today, but this time, it’s in a friendly direction. A small handful of lenders have offered modest improvements, but even if every lender followed suit, yesterday morning’s rates would still be slightly lower. To repeat a phrase from yesterday, yes, this is much ado about nothing. Top tier, conventional 30yr fixed rates are still orbiting 6.75% in a calm, narrow range in the bigger picture.
Fed’s Bostic now sees just one rate cut this year due to tariffs
Bostic now sees price growth returning to the Fed’s 2% goal at some point in early 2027.
Changing US economic data would boost costs for banks
Officials in the Trump administration have floated the idea of changing how the government measures economic growth. Economists say the shift would create new expenses for banks.
OCC to explore alternative credit metrics
Acting Comptroller Rodney Hood discussed using fintech to evaluate self-employed borrowers’ creditworthiness, saying alternative credit models could promote financial inclusion.
Banks push Congress to renew cyber threat sharing protections
Trade groups representing banks and utilities urged lawmakers to reauthorize the CISA law before it expires in September.
Corelogic is the latest mortgage industry company to rebrand
The new name Cotality, along with its latest tag line, reflects its role in serving and uniting the entire property ecosystem, company executives said.
Yields Pushing Range Boundaries After Tariff Updates and Econ Data
Yields Pushing Range Boundaries After Tariff Updates and Econ Data
Bonds lost ground over the weekend as news of tariff exclusions fueled a stock rally. A modest recovery was underway when the S&P Services PMI came out stronger. From that point on, bonds were on the back foot, ultimately hitting their weakest levels in the afternoon. Incidentally, this brings 10yr yields right in line with the ceiling of the recent range. Today’s video discusses the implications of a potential range breakout, which can mean different things for different people.
Econ Data / Events
S&P Services PMI
54.3 vs 50.8 f’cast, 51.0 prev
Market Movement Recap
09:32 AM Moderately weaker over the weekend, but recovering somewhat now. MBS down an eighth and 10yr up 3.5bps at 4.289
09:56 AM Some additional weakness after PMI data. MBS down nearly a quarter point and 10yr up 6bps at 4.316
02:20 PM 10yr yields are up nearly 8bps at 4.333 and MBS are down nearly 3/8ths after hawkish comments from Fed’s Bostic (but not obviously because of Bostic, necessarily).
03:48 PM Little changed from previous update and flat since then. MBS down 11 ticks (.34) and 10yr up 7.9bps at 4.334
Fannie, Freddie speculation mounts on Bessent remark on sovereign wealth fund
Wall Street is weighing in on the possible fate of home loan giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, after a fleeting suggestion by Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent earlier this week that the government’s stakes could eventually become part of the proposed US sovereign wealth fund.