“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
April 28, 2026

Half a Trillion Dollars Is Reshaping AI — Here's Your Gameplan to Not Get Left Behind
We've spent three posts laying out the landscape. Five hyperscalers. 67% of global AI compute. Half a trillion dollars in new infrastructure investment. Growing concentration, growing dependency, and a market structure that increasingly favors the biggest players. Now let's talk about what you actually do with that information — because knowing is only half the game.First: Understand That This Train Has Already Left the Station
The consolidation of AI infrastructure is not a future threat — it's a current reality. The compute concentration we've been describing isn't something that might happen if regulators don't act. It's already baked into the architecture of the technology you use every day. That's not a reason to panic. It's a reason to be strategic. AI is genuinely transforming the mortgage and real estate industries for the better. Fannie Mae projected that 55% of lenders would be using AI by the end of 2025, and that number is almost certainly higher now. Consumers are already turning to AI platforms to find mortgage lenders and evaluate real estate agents. A Florida homeowner sold their house $100,000 over asking in five days using ChatGPT to price, market, and negotiate — without a real estate agent. The AI revolution is happening whether you're ready for it or not. Your job is to be ready.Step One: Audit Your AI Stack
Make a simple list of every AI-powered tool you use in your business. Your CRM. Your marketing platform. Your email automation. Your chatbot. Your lead scoring tool. Your compliance assistant. For each one, ask: Where does this run? What cloud platform hosts it? What happens to my data if this vendor changes pricing or shuts down? Most vendors will answer these questions if you ask directly. If they won't — or can't — that's important information too. You want to understand the infrastructure dependencies underneath your business, not just the interface you click on every day.Step Two: Don't Put All Your Eggs in One AI Basket
Vendor diversification is not just about price comparison shopping. In a world where the underlying infrastructure is highly concentrated, it's also about resilience. If your entire client communication strategy lives inside one AI platform from one vendor running on one hyperscaler's cloud, you have a single point of failure that runs much deeper than most people realize. A pricing change, a service disruption, or even a policy shift at the infrastructure level could cascade through your vendor and land directly on your desk. This doesn't mean you need a dozen different AI tools. It means being thoughtful about which parts of your business are AI-dependent and making sure you're not entirely exposed through a single chain of dependency.Step Three: Stay Informed on the Regulatory Environment
The antitrust conversation around AI infrastructure is moving fast. The US and the European Union are both actively examining whether hyperscaler dominance in cloud computing creates anticompetitive conditions in AI markets. Regulatory actions in these areas can change the competitive landscape significantly — and quickly. For mortgage and real estate professionals, regulatory shifts in AI can affect everything from how your tools are priced to what data they can access to how AI-assisted decisions need to be disclosed to borrowers. Staying informed on these developments isn't just intellectual curiosity. It's risk management.Step Four: Lean Into AI Now — While the Field Is Still Open
Here's the honest bottom line: even with concentration risks on the horizon, the current AI landscape is an extraordinary opportunity for mortgage and real estate professionals who are willing to embrace it early. The loan officers and agents who build genuine AI fluency now — who understand how to use these tools effectively, who build workflows around them, who develop skills that most of their competitors are still ignoring — are going to have a meaningful competitive advantage for years. The window for being an early adopter in this space is not infinite. The mortgage and real estate industries are catching up fast. Right now, being AI-literate is a differentiator. In two or three years, it will be a baseline expectation. The same five companies that control most of the world's AI compute are investing hundreds of billions of dollars because they believe AI is going to reshape every major industry on Earth. They're right. The only question is whether you're building skills and systems that put you ahead of that wave — or whether you're going to spend the next few years scrambling to catch up.The Big Picture
What's happening at the hyperscaler level is a reminder that technology never exists in a vacuum. Behind every slick AI tool you use is a physical infrastructure of chips, cables, cooling systems, and enormous amounts of electricity — and increasingly, a very small number of companies control all of it. Understanding that structure doesn't make you paranoid. It makes you informed. And in a rapidly changing industry where AI is becoming central to how mortgages are processed, how homes are marketed, and how clients are served, being informed is the most valuable competitive advantage you can have. The five companies at the top of this stack are playing a very long game with enormous resources. Your job isn't to beat them at their game. Your job is to understand the game well enough to build a thriving business in the world they're creating. You've got everything you need to do exactly that. If this series opened your eyes — even a little — subscribe to Well That Makes Sense for more analysis that actually connects the big picture to your business. No jargon, no fluff, just the stuff that matters. Subscribe now and we'll keep sending it straight to your inbox. (No AI was harmed in the production of this newsletter. Several hyperscalers made money though.)April 25, 2026
The Mortgage Credit Score Shake-Up Is Finally Here: What VantageScore 4.0 Means for LOs, Realtors, and Buyers
For years, “credit score modernization” sounded like one of those mortgage industry phrases that lived forever in committee meetings, white papers, and conference panels. Useful? Maybe. Exciting? Not exactly. But now it has moved from theory to the front lines of mortgage lending.
FHFA and HUD have opened the door for VantageScore 4.0 to be used in the government-backed mortgage world. Fannie Mae announced updates allowing approved lenders to use VantageScore 4.0 immediately, while FICO Score 10T is also being added as part of the larger modernization push. FHA is also moving to permit VantageScore 4.0 and FICO 10T for FHA-insured underwriting. That means this is not just a credit-score nerd story. It is a loan officer, realtor, buyer, and affordability story.
What Is Actually Happening?
For decades, the conventional mortgage market has leaned heavily on older “Classic FICO” models. FHFA had already validated both VantageScore 4.0 and FICO 10T back in 2022, but implementation was expected to be a long, slow transition. Now, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are moving into a lender-choice phase where approved lenders can use VantageScore 4.0 instead of only relying on Classic FICO for eligible loans.
Fannie Mae’s Selling Guide announcement says the guide is being updated to add VantageScore 4.0 and FICO Score 10T as approved credit score models. The immediate-use piece applies to approved lenders using VantageScore 4.0 from Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion. Lenders that are not approved for VantageScore 4.0 delivery still need to keep using Classic FICO for now.
National Mortgage Professional framed this as one of the biggest structural shifts in mortgage underwriting in decades, because it introduces real credit-score competition into a market that has long been dominated by one model. Their key point is worth underlining: this is not the end of FICO. It is the beginning of a multi-score mortgage environment.
How VantageScore Is Different From Experian, TransUnion, and Equifax
This is where people often get tangled up. VantageScore is not the same kind of thing as Experian, TransUnion, or Equifax. Experian, TransUnion, and Equifax are credit bureaus. They collect and maintain credit data. VantageScore is a scoring model that uses credit-report data to calculate a score. In plain English: the bureaus hold the ingredients; the scoring model is the recipe.
VantageScore 4.0 was created by the three major credit bureaus, but it is still a scoring model, not a bureau. The reason you may see “Equifax VantageScore 4.0,” “Experian VantageScore 4.0,” and “TransUnion VantageScore 4.0” is because the model can be applied to the data from each bureau. That matters in mortgage because Fannie Mae’s update says those three bureau-based versions are eligible for immediate use by approved lenders.
Why Mortgage and Real Estate Pros Should Care
The big headline is borrower access. VantageScore 4.0 uses trended credit data and can include newer kinds of payment history, such as rent, utilities, and telecom data when available. That may help some creditworthy borrowers who have thin files, limited traditional credit, or strong rental-payment histories but have not been well represented under older scoring systems.
For loan officers, this could create more opportunities at the pre-approval table. Some buyers who looked like a “not yet” under one score model may deserve a second look once lender systems, investor rules, pricing, and approval processes catch up. For real estate agents, this could eventually mean more first-time buyers with a realistic path to financing, especially renters who have been paying housing costs responsibly for years.
But let’s not oversell the timeline. This is a major policy shift, not a magic wand. Fannie Mae is starting with a limited rollout for approved lenders, and operational readiness still matters. Credit vendors, LOS workflows, AUS integration, secondary-market delivery, compliance teams, and investor overlays all need to line up before this changes every borrower conversation on Main Street.
Three Pros of the Move
First, it creates competition. A single-score environment can get expensive and stale. More accepted models may pressure pricing, improve innovation, and give lenders more options.
Second, it may expand access to mortgage credit. Borrowers with strong rent-payment history or thinner traditional credit files may have a better chance of being evaluated accurately.
Third, it gives the market better data. Fannie Mae plans to publish historical credit score data for VantageScore 4.0 and FICO 10T, which should help lenders and investors study performance instead of guessing.
Three Cons to Watch
First, adoption will be uneven. Just because a model is approved does not mean every lender can use it tomorrow. Approved-lender status, investor delivery rules, vendor readiness, and overlays will matter.
Second, borrower messaging could get messy. Consumers already struggle to understand why their credit score changes from app to app. Adding more mortgage-approved score models may create confusion unless LOs explain it clearly.
Third, risk management still has to prove itself at scale. Newer models may be more predictive and inclusive, but the industry will still need real production data, performance tracking, and careful implementation to avoid unintended credit-risk problems.
The Bottom Line
This is one of those mortgage changes that sounds technical but could become very practical. It may change which borrowers can qualify, how lenders shop credit reports, how LOs explain credit strategy, and how realtors think about renter-to-buyer conversion.
For now, the smartest move is not to promise buyers that “everything changed overnight.” It did not. The smarter move is to know the change is real, understand which lenders are ready, and be prepared to revisit buyers who were close but not quite there. In this market, one more qualified buyer is not just a lead. It is a small miracle with a pre-approval letter.
Subscribe to Well That Makes Sense for more mortgage and real estate updates explained in plain English — because your pipeline already has enough mystery without your credit-score model joining witness protection.
April 24, 2026

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