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HOME2023-01-22T13:43:33-07:00

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

Mortgage Today (AM) - 04/15/26 {{catlist}}
April 15, 2026
READ MORE WTMS Blog Today = What's up in Mortgage Today (AM) - 04/15/2026 Mortgage rates tumbled to their lowest point in a month as bond markets rallied on optimism that Middle East peace talks could end the Iran conflict, with the 30-year fixed dropping to 6.42%. Refinancing applications surged 5% for the week and sit 15% above year-ago levels, signaling that rate-sensitive borrowers are seizing the opportunity. However, purchase applications slipped 1% last week and remain 3% below last year's levels, as economic uncertainty continues to sideline homebuyers. The core inflation data delivered better-than-expected news, with March PPI showing just 0.1% monthly growth in core prices versus the 0.5% forecast. This pricing relief comes as the market now prices in contained inflation despite persistent geopolitical tensions and energy-driven volatility. Existing home sales hit their slowest pace since 2009, declining 3.6% month-over-month in March, according to the National Association of Realtors. Sales fell across all four U.S. regions, with the median sale price reaching $408,800, down from earlier months. The year-over-year picture is mixed: the South and West showed gains while the Northeast and Midwest retreated further. NAR Chief Economist Dr. Lawrence Yun attributed the weakness to lower consumer confidence and softer job growth that continues suppressing buyer activity. For mortgage originators, this translates to tighter purchase loan volume and increased pressure on refi-dependent business models. Newrez is broadening access to its new Medical Professional Home Loan by opening the program to wholesale brokers, not just retail channels. The product features up to 100% financing with no PMI, qualifies physicians on projected income rather than current compensation, and treats student debt with flexible debt-to-income ratios. Loan amounts reach $2 million, targeting residents, fellows, and newly practicing physicians who possess strong long-term earning potential but fall outside standard agency or jumbo underwriting parameters. This niche product expansion signals how lenders are carving out specialized lanes to capture origination volume in a competitive market. The Community Bankers Association is pushing the Federal Housing Finance Agency to fast-track VantageScore implementation in conventional mortgage underwriting, citing a staggering 1,567% increase in FICO-related costs over the past three and a half years. Equifax and TransUnion have already reduced VantageScore 4.0 pricing to approximately $1 per pull, but CHLA wants structural reform beyond pricing—specifically, directing Fannie and Freddie to develop in-house credit assessment capabilities. This cost pressure reflects broader industry frustration that the multi-score transition isn't advancing quickly enough while credit costs continue climbing, directly impacting lender margins and pricing competitiveness. March inflation data delivered modest relief across import and producer prices, with imports rising just 0.8% month-over-month against a forecast of 2.3%. The April Empire State Manufacturing Index surged to 11.0, well above expectations of negative 0.5, suggesting renewed economic optimism. Bond prices responded positively, with 10-year Treasury yields rising modestly to 4.273% as markets reassess the inflation outlook in light of potential peace developments. UMBS 5.0 coupons trade at 99.27, down slightly from Tuesday's close, while GNMA securities show similar modest weakness. Lock opportunities remain favorable as pricing has improved to four-week highs, though the market exhibits caution given the war's uncertainty. Two straight days of bond market gains represents the maximum winning streak seen since the conflict began, making this window potentially valuable for borrowers sitting on the fence between locking and floating. Today brings the NAHB Housing Market Index, the Federal Reserve's Beige Book, Treasury auctions, and additional Fed commentary that could shift sentiment quickly. Origination teams should monitor oil prices closely, as they've become the primary near-term driver of bond volatility and rate direction. Locking vs Floating The bond market has notched two consecutive days of gains—the longest winning streak since the war started—offering a rare window for borrowers debating lock versus float. Current pricing represents the best levels in four weeks, suggesting this may be an opportune moment for rate-lock decisions. However, the market cautioned that two-day streaks have been the maximum seen recently, meaning extended gains cannot be assumed. Those floating should remain alert to daily oil prices and geopolitical headlines, as sentiment can shift rapidly even with modest economic data surprises. Today's Events Core PPI m/m (Mar): 0.1% vs 0.5% forecast Core PPI y/y (Mar): 3.8% vs 4.1% forecast PPI m/m (Mar): 0.5% vs 1.1% forecast PPI y/y (Mar): 4.0% vs 4.6% forecast Import prices m/m (Mar): 0.8% vs 2.0% forecast NY Fed Manufacturing (Apr): 11.0 vs -0.5 forecast NAHB Housing Market Index (Apr) Federal Reserve Beige Book Treasury auctions (short-duration) Bond Pricing UMBS 30 yr | Coupon | Price | Intra-Day Change | | 5.0 | 99.27 | -0.11 | | 5.5 | 100.98 | -0.07 | | 6.0 | 102.3 | -0.04 | GNMA 30 yr | Coupon | Price | Intra-Day Change | | 5.0 | 99.87 | -0.04 | | 5.5 | 101.0 | -0.07 | | 6.0 | 101.97 | -0.09 | Treasuries | Term | Yield | Price | Intra-Day Yield Change | | 2 yr | 3.764 | 100.213 | 0.021 | | 3 yr | 3.78 | 99.214 | 0.015 | | 5 yr | 3.89 | 99.931 | 0.022 | | 7 yr | 4.072 | 101.078 | 0.026 | | 10 yr | 4.273 | 98.805 | 0.023 | | 30 yr | 4.881 | 97.954 | 0.023 | Market Data
Mortgage Today (PM) - 04/14/26 {{catlist}}
April 14, 2026
READ MORE WTMS Blog Today = What's up in Mortgage Today (PM) - 04/14/2026 Bonds are staging their best day in four weeks on the back of war-related optimism and PPI inflation data that dramatically undershot expectations. UMBS 5.0 gained nearly a quarter point today, climbing to 99.39, while the 10-year Treasury yield dropped 4.1 basis points to settle at 4.247 percent. A Fox News report this morning quoting a Trump administration official saying "we have all the ingredients of a deal" with Iran sent oil prices lower and sparked both bond and equity rallies. The market's reaction was swift and decisive, with investors rotating into safer assets as geopolitical risk sentiment eased. This momentum marks only the second consecutive day of gains since the start of the war, making lock-worthy pricing available for the first time in roughly a month. March's existing home sales data paints a mixed picture as the spring selling season limps into its opening month. The National Association of Realtors reported a 3.6 percent decline in sales compared to February, though year-over-year comparisons improved from a 1 percent drop. Chief Economist Lawrence Yun attributed weakness to lower consumer confidence and softer job growth, signaling that demand pressures remain uneven across the nation. Median home prices hit a record for March at $408,800, continuing the ceiling effect on affordability despite gradually improving conditions. Days on market compression—falling from 47 to 41 days—reveals a bifurcated market where COVID-era hot spots have cooled while Northeast and Midwest metros see renewed buyer interest. The good news for borrowers: wage growth is outpacing home price appreciation while mortgage rates hold steady, creating measurable improvement in affordability metrics that will matter for Q2 loan production. Originators should note that regional dispersion in housing demand remains pronounced, which means marketing and pipeline strategies need geographic precision. Builders and real estate agents in declining metros may face margin pressure, but mortgage professionals in appreciating regions could see pipeline growth. The combination of better affordability and regional tailwinds in specific markets creates differentiated origination opportunities depending on your geographic footprint. Lock your best-qualified borrowers early; refinance volume remains depressed and purchase pipelines will vary by state. Core PPI inflation came in far cooler than forecast, with the month-over-month reading at 0.1 percent versus a 0.5 percent expectation and a 3.8 percent year-over-year gain versus 4.1 percent expected. Headline PPI also underperformed forecasts significantly, with month-over-month at 0.5 percent (expected 1.1 percent) and year-over-year at 4.0 percent (expected 4.6 percent). Surprisingly, despite these massive inflation beats, bond markets did not react immediately at the 8:32 a.m. data release, with UMBS unchanged and the 10-year up only a handful of basis points. The lack of initial response suggests market participants were already positioned for softer inflation and were focused on Iran developments instead. By late afternoon, however, bond strength had reached its peak as the geopolitical thaw fully priced in. The 10-year Treasury now trades at critical technical levels that origination teams should monitor for lock-trigger planning. Current yield of 4.247 percent sits just below the 4.28 percent resistance level, with the next ceiling at 4.40 percent and a critical resistance zone at 4.59 percent. Conversely, the 4.05 percent floor provides downside support if geopolitical tensions resurface or economic data disappoints. GNMA 5.0 coupons are at 99.94 with a 0.13 gain, slightly outperforming UMBS on the day and reflecting continued confidence in government-backed securities. For mortgage sellers managing fallout or repricing clients, today's four-week price highs offer a window to lock quality borrowers before the geopolitical landscape shifts again. Mortgage teams should treat today's bond strength as a tactical opportunity rather than a trend reversal given the fragility of the Iran ceasefire narrative. Two-day winning streaks have been the maximum since the war began, meaning mean reversion is statistically likely within the week. Clients locked at Friday's worse pricing now face painful repricing scenarios if today's levels hold, but sellers should resist panic-selling at best-of-month levels. Watch for any negative headlines on Iran negotiations to trigger a quick snapback toward 4.40 percent yields; the buffer is thinner than it appears. Subscribe to WellThatMakesSense.com for free daily mortgage market updates and lock/float guidance. Locking vs Floating The bond market has delivered the best pricing in four weeks after two consecutive days of moderate gains. However, this represents only the second consecutive winning day since the conflict began, suggesting reversal risk remains elevated. Borrowers on a fence about locking versus floating should recognize this as a genuine opportunity to lock, especially at these levels, but should not assume this momentum extends beyond a few more days. The geopolitical situation remains fluid, and any setback in Iran negotiations could quickly erase these gains. Today's Events Core PPI m/m (Mar): 0.1% vs 0.5% forecast, 0.5% previous Core PPI y/y (Mar): 3.8% vs 4.1% forecast, 3.9% previous PPI m/m (Mar): 0.5% vs 1.1% forecast, 0.7% previous PPI y/y (Mar): 4.0% vs 4.6% forecast, 3.4% previous Bond Pricing UMBS 30 yr | Coupon | Price | Intra-Day Change | GNMA 30 yr | Coupon | Price | Intra-Day Change | Treasuries | Term | Yield | Price | Intra-Day Yield Change | Market Data
Mortgage Today (AM) - 04/14/26 {{catlist}}
April 14, 2026
READ MORE WTMS Blog Today = What's up in Mortgage Today (AM) - 04/14/2026 Bonds ignore a massive beat in inflation data, as diplomatic hopes in Iran negotiations keep risk sentiment alive and energy costs anchored. The 10-year Treasury is holding around 4.29%, barely moved despite PPI coming in significantly cooler than economists expected. March producer prices rose just 0.5% month-over-month versus forecasts of 1.1%, while core PPI advanced only 0.1% versus the expected 0.4%, signaling that underlying wholesale inflation is cooling despite war-related oil volatility. Markets are effectively in a holding pattern, with futures pricing in no change to Fed policy through year-end. This muted reaction tells you everything: traders are more focused on geopolitics and oil than hard data. The lack of volatility has been a gift to mortgage investors, as embedded optionality outperforms when rates stay range-bound. Agency MBS have added another 6 basis points of excess return in recent weeks and fully erased losses from the onset of Middle East tensions, a remarkable recovery aided by declining rate volatility and steady Treasury demand. Current coupon spreads remain compressed but within familiar ranges, leaving investors focused on carry and liquidity rather than directional bets. Higher coupon, lower pay-up specified pools continue to offer relative value compared to investment-grade corporates. For mortgage originators, this stability means lock-in opportunities without sharp repricing risk. Existing home sales fell 3.6% month-over-month in March to 3.98 million units, pressured by elevated mortgage rates, higher prices, limited inventory, and softer job growth at the start of spring buying season. The NFIB optimism index dropped to 95.8 in March, marking its lowest reading in a year and well below expectations. These demand headwinds align with the broader constraint on origination volume, though diplomacy signals from Iran talks are helping equity markets rally and reduce fear of further rate spikes. The combination of cooler inflation, slowing sales, and recession concerns creates a three-way tug on long-term rates that keeps Treasury yields anchored. Energy prices remain the wildcard—if oil stabilizes near current levels, inflation stays manageable. Policy dynamics continue to reshape mortgage spreads more than benchmark rates, according to capital markets analysis. Policy signals around MBS interventions, institutional ownership debates, and credit regulation are exerting subtle but powerful effects on execution and hedging strategies across the industry. The $1.8 trillion annual budget deficit remains a background headwind for rates, though its immediate impact is overshadowed by geopolitical headlines. Understanding these policy nuances helps originators distinguish between noise and signal, avoiding costly overreactions to headlines without structural market consequences. Treasury valuations remain fairly attractive relative to corporates, with short-duration exposure in high demand as investors prioritize capital preservation. The 15-year MBS sector is now screening as the cheapest on an OAS basis, presenting an opportunity for investors hunting relative value. Lower-coupon pools benefit from carry, while higher-coupon paper offers some relief from further curve steepening. Agency MBS continue to look fairly valued, not stretched, which supports a steady-handed approach rather than aggressive positioning in an uncertain environment. Investors should watch for any narrowing in spreads as oil prices moderate further. Risk management frameworks favor disciplined positioning until macro clarity emerges on growth, inflation, and Fed policy post-Powell transition. Markets are pricing no Fed rate changes through year-end, despite inflation surprises cutting both ways—cooler core readings suggest no urgency to hike, yet elevated energy and geopolitical risks keep terminal rate expectations elevated. For originators, this means the 4.25%–4.35% zone in 10-year yields remains a logical reference range until diplomatic developments firm up or dissipate entirely. Lock triggers at 4.34% or 4.40% work for risk-takers, while conservative shops should maintain defenses until yields decisively break below 4.30%. Locking vs Floating Market momentum in the 10-year remains flat compared to March, creating more room for different lock and float strategies. Risk-takers have a reasonable case for setting lock triggers at 4.34% to 4.40% in yield terms, capturing any upside surprise if geopolitics escalate further. The risk-averse camp sees no compelling reason to lower defenses until Treasury yields convincingly break below 4.30% and hold there. The key insight: yield ceilings and floors matter more than intraday MBS moves when tracking bigger-picture bond market direction. Today's Events Core PPI m/m (Mar): 0.1% vs 0.5% forecast, 0.5% previous Core PPI y/y (Mar): 3.8% vs 4.1% forecast, 3.9% previous PPI m/m (Mar): 0.5% vs 1.1% forecast, 0.7% previous PPI y/y (Mar): 4.0% vs 4.6% forecast, 3.4% previous Bond Pricing UMBS 30 yr | Coupon | Price | Intra-Day Change | |5.0|99.26|0.10| |5.5|100.98|0.06| |6.0|102.30|0.04| GNMA 30 yr | Coupon | Price | Intra-Day Change | |5.0|99.71|-0.09| |5.5|101.09|0.07| |6.0|101.98|-0.02| Treasuries | Term | Yield | Price | Intra-Day Yield Change | |2 yr|3.774|100.193|0.000| |3 yr|3.789|99.188|-0.003| |5 yr|3.902|99.878|-0.011| |7 yr|4.084|101.003|-0.010| |10 yr|4.282|98.731|-0.006| |30 yr|4.887|97.852|-0.009| Market Data
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