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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) - 06/17/26 {{catlist}}
June 17, 2026
READ MORE **WTMS Blog Today = What's up in Mortgage Today (AM) - 06/17/2026** Retail sales punched above expectations this morning, rising 0.9 percent in May versus a forecast of 0.5 percent, signaling consumer resilience that could complicate the Fed's rate-cutting narrative. The control group—a key inflation measure stripped of autos and gas—also beat estimates at 0.7 percent versus 0.4 percent expected. This stronger-than-anticipated demand data arrives on a critical day: the Federal Reserve's first policy decision under new Chair Kevin Warsh, whose communication style and stance on inflation could reshape market expectations for the remainder of 2026. Treasuries are already pricing in a more balanced or slightly hawkish Fed, with the 10-year yield holding near 4.43 percent after touching a recent floor of 4.42 percent yesterday. Warsh's press conference this afternoon will be closely watched for clues on the future policy path and whether his approach diverges from his predecessors. MBS prices remain essentially flat on the day, with UMBS gaining modest ground while Ginnie Mae securities underperformed ahead of settlement positioning. The 10-year Treasury is unchanged at 4.43 percent, showing investors are in a wait-and-see posture before the Fed decision. Agency MBS in the middle coupon stack tightened spreads slightly, but higher and lower coupons lagged the rally as the yield curve flattened. Oil prices fell below $80 per barrel on optimism surrounding a potential U.S.-Iran agreement to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, though broader market response has been muted as traders remain skeptical about the durability of any peace deal. The combination of easing energy concerns and lingering geopolitical uncertainty has left rates near the lower end of their recent range. Technical resistance levels remain critical for mortgage originators deciding on rate-lock strategies. Yesterday's test of the 4.42 percent floor on the 10-year yield sparked multiple bounces before the afternoon bounce higher, suggesting traders are cautious about pushing yields decisively below this level. For loan officers managing pipelines, this technical resistance means borrowers with 4.57 percent lock triggers may be inclined toward more defensive positioning until the 4.42 percent level is conclusively broken. Bond market momentum—tracked through these 10-year yield ceilings and floors—helps originators understand whether recent rate moves signal broader structural shifts or are simply intraday noise. With major economic data and Fed policy decisions still ahead, tactical positioning becomes essential for managing pipeline risk. Non-QM originations are projected to reach $150 billion to $180 billion this year, while HELOC volume grew nearly 6 percent year-over-year in Q3 2025, reflecting borrower demand for alternative products. However, point-of-sale platforms must keep pace with this product complexity, and mortgage companies are increasingly turning to dynamic app configurations that eliminate the need for custom coding or lengthy development cycles. Capital markets teams are also modernizing their hedge operations through AI-powered tools that provide real-time visibility into margin performance, reduce manual work, and improve settlement accuracy. Servicing portfolios are evolving from back-office functions into strategic customer intelligence hubs, with firms using advanced data infrastructure to identify emerging borrower needs before they appear in traditional data sets. Lenders that invest in these operational tools and data capabilities are positioning themselves to remain competitive in an increasingly complex origination and servicing landscape. Fraud detection is becoming an essential early-stage screening tool as mortgage fraud grows more sophisticated and subtle. New solutions that centralize fraud risk scoring and property research into user-friendly dashboards allow underwriters to investigate potential issues faster without navigating multiple vendor portals. Settlement risk is also declining as lenders improve reporting accuracy and internalize TBA trading operations, reducing back-office work and operational complexity. These infrastructure improvements—from dynamic application platforms to AI-assisted margin management to consolidated fraud monitoring—represent the operational investments that separate efficient lenders from struggling competitors. The mortgage industry is shifting from manual, disconnected processes toward integrated, intelligent workflows that deliver faster decisions and lower operational costs. Today's calendar brings several data releases and events that could move rates further: mortgage applications data has already come in down 3.8 percent week-over-week, April Business Inventories, May Pending Home Sales, weekly crude oil inventories, and the June Federal Open Market Committee rate decision are all scheduled. Markets are also monitoring the Strait of Hormuz reopening agreement set to be formally signed on June 19, which could reshape energy price expectations and inflation outlook over the next several quarters. Chair Warsh's first press conference following the Fed decision will be the most closely watched event, as traders decode whether his communication strategy mirrors his predecessors or signals a material shift in the central bank's bias. Benchmark Treasury yields have edged 2 to 3 basis points lower while MBS prices gained roughly a quarter point, reflecting modest risk-off sentiment ahead of these catalysts. The combination of strong retail sales, technical resistance in yields, and uncertainty around Fed messaging creates a day of significant positioning decisions for mortgage originators and capital markets teams. **Locking vs Floating** Borrowers and originators holding 4.57 percent lock ceilings should monitor whether the 10-year yield definitively breaks below 4.42 percent before committing to floating positions. Yesterday's technical test at 4.42 percent generated multiple bounces, signaling trader caution about pushing yields lower without confirmation. A decisive break below 4.42 percent—backed by Fed dovishness or weaker economic data—would justify floating; a retreat back above 4.50 percent would favor locking. Today's FOMC decision and Chair Warsh's messaging are the primary catalysts that could break this technical standoff. Until the 10-year yield definitively resolves above or below current resistance levels, risk-management discipline suggests a cautious stance rather than aggressive floating. **Today's Events** Retail Sales (May): 0.9% vs 0.5% forecast, 0.5% prior Retail Sales Control Group MoM (May): 0.7% vs 0.4% forecast, 0.5% prior April Business Inventories May Pending Home Sales Weekly Crude Oil Inventories June Federal Open Market Committee Rate Decision Chair Kevin Warsh Press Conference **Bond Pricing** **UMBS 30 yr** | Coupon | Price | Intra-Day Change | | 5.0 | 98.5 | 0.06 | | 5.5 | 100.46 | 0.01 | | 6.0 | 102.2 | 0.02 | **GNMA 30 yr** | Coupon | Price | Intra-Day Change | | 5.0 | 98.89 | -0.07 | | 5.5 | 100.66 | -0.1 | | 6.0 | 102.01 | -0.14 | **Treasuries** | Term | Yield | Price | Intra-Day Yield Change | | 2 yr | 4.064 | 99.64 | 0.011 | | 3 yr | 4.101 | 98.319 | 0.008 | | 5 yr | 4.165 | 98.703 | 0.004 | | 7 yr | 4.289 | 99.766 | -0.004 | | 10 yr | 4.433 | 97.534 | -0.005 | | 30 yr | 4.926 | 97.251 | -0.018 | Market Data
Gorilla Poop, Glitter Bombs, and a $10.7M Lesson: Why Your LO Recruiting Strategy Just Got a Lot More Expensive {{catlist}}
June 17, 2026
READ MORE

Gorilla Poop, Glitter Bombs, and a $10.7M Lesson: Why Your LO Recruiting Strategy Just Got a Lot More Expensive

Guild Mortgage's nuclear verdict against poaching competitors just changed the game for every mortgage company thinking about raiding the competition's roster

Picture this: You're a mortgage executive, sipping your overpriced cold brew, scrolling through LinkedIn when you spot a top-producing loan officer at a competitor. Your fingers hover over the keyboard. Should you slide into their DMs? Send a recruiting email? After Guild Mortgage just secured a $10.7 million arbitration award against former employees and their new employers, you might want to think twice before hitting send. Because what started with some questionable recruiting tactics ended with literal gorilla poop and glitter bombs—and we're not talking about the fun kind of glitter.

Welcome to the wild, wild west of mortgage loan officer recruiting, where the stakes just got exponentially higher and the legal precedents are starting to pile up faster than rate lock extensions in a volatile market. If you thought the LO recruiting wars were intense before, buckle up. We're entering a new era where your aggressive talent acquisition strategy could cost you more than a Super Bowl ad.

The Guild Saga: When Recruiting Gets Radioactive

Let's rewind to where this all began. Guild Mortgage, a major player in the residential lending space, found itself in an all-too-familiar situation: watching talented loan officers walk out the door to competitors. But this wasn't your standard "thanks for the memories, here's my two weeks' notice" departure. According to court documents and arbitration findings, this was allegedly a coordinated poaching operation that involved systematic targeting of Guild's LO roster by competing firms.

The case centered on former Guild employees who jumped ship to competitors, allegedly taking proprietary information, client relationships, and recruiting other Guild LOs along the way. What made this case particularly spicy wasn't just the departures—it was the methods allegedly used. We're talking about potential violations of non-solicitation agreements, misappropriation of confidential information, and what Guild argued was a deliberate strategy to gut their production teams.

Here's where it gets deliciously petty: During the legal battle, someone (and we're not pointing fingers here) allegedly sent gorilla poop and glitter bombs to the plaintiffs. Yes, you read that correctly. Actual feces from our primate cousins and the craft supply that refuses to die, weaponized in a mortgage industry dispute. If that doesn't scream "this got personal," I don't know what does.

The arbitration panel didn't find the bathroom humor amusing. They awarded Guild a staggering $10.7 million in damages, and Guild is now asking a judge to confirm that award and make it enforceable. This isn't just a slap on the wrist—this is a financial crater that could sink smaller operations and make even mid-sized lenders think twice about their recruiting playbook.

Lower.com's Legal Troubles: The Poaching Playbook Backfires

Guild isn't the only company fighting back against aggressive recruiting tactics. Lower.com, the digital mortgage lender that's been making waves with its tech-forward approach, found itself on the receiving end of poaching lawsuits that alleged systematic targeting of competitors' loan officers.

The allegations paint a picture of coordinated recruitment efforts that may have crossed legal lines. We're talking about potential tortious interference with existing employment contracts, violations of non-solicitation agreements, and what plaintiffs argued was a deliberate strategy to damage competitors by stripping away their production capacity.

What makes these cases particularly noteworthy is the scale and coordination alleged. This wasn't just hiring a talented LO who happened to apply—these lawsuits suggest systematic campaigns to identify, target, and recruit entire teams, sometimes using insider information about compensation structures, production numbers, and internal dynamics.

The legal theory being tested here is crucial for the entire industry: At what point does aggressive recruiting cross the line into actionable interference? Where's the boundary between competitive talent acquisition and illegal poaching? These cases are starting to draw that line, and it's closer than many companies realized.

What This Means for Your Company: The New Rules of Engagement

So what are the implications for mortgage companies navigating this increasingly litigious landscape? Let's break down the new reality:

First, employment agreements actually matter now. For years, non-solicitation and non-compete clauses in mortgage industry employment contracts were treated like those iTunes terms and conditions nobody reads. Sure, they existed, but enforcement was spotty at best. Guild's $10.7 million award just changed that calculation dramatically. Companies are going to start enforcing these provisions aggressively, and courts are showing they're willing to back them up with real financial consequences.

Second, the "everyone does it" defense is dead. The mortgage industry has long operated with a wink-and-nod understanding that poaching is just part of the game. Top producers move around, taking their databases and relationships with them, and everyone just accepted it as the cost of doing business. That gentleman's agreement is officially over. Companies that continue operating under the old playbook are exposing themselves to massive legal liability.

Third, documentation is everything. If you're recruiting, you better have a paper trail showing you did it by the book. Did the LO approach you first, or did you initiate contact? Did you encourage them to bring confidential information or client lists? Did you coordinate with other employees to orchestrate a mass exodus? These details matter enormously in litigation, and the discovery process will expose every text, email, and DM.

Fourth, the talent war just got more expensive. If recruiting carries the risk of eight-figure judgments, companies are going to build that risk into their talent acquisition budgets. Expect to see more robust legal vetting of new hires, stricter onboarding protocols around confidential information, and potentially higher compensation packages to offset the increased legal complexity. The days of the quick hire and fast ramp are numbered.

Fifth, corporate culture matters more than ever. The best defense against poaching isn't legal threats—it's retention. Companies that create environments where LOs actually want to stay, with competitive comp, good technology, responsive operations, and respectful management, won't have to worry as much about raids. Guild's case is a cautionary tale, but it's also a reminder that people leave bad situations more often than they leave good ones.

There's also a broader industry implication worth considering: consolidation may accelerate. If recruiting top talent from competitors becomes legally and financially risky, companies looking to grow will increasingly turn to acquisitions instead. Why risk a lawsuit when you can just buy the whole company? UWM's Two Harbors bid and CrossCountry's counter-offer might be previewing the future of mortgage industry growth strategy.

The Guild verdict also raises questions about who bears the liability in these situations. The $10.7 million award wasn't just against the departing employees—it included the companies that hired them. That means mortgage companies are now on the hook for the recruiting practices of their HR teams and hiring managers. Executive leadership better make sure everyone understands the new rules, because ignorance won't be a viable defense when the arbitration notices start arriving.

For loan officers themselves, this creates a complicated landscape. Your marketability is still your most valuable asset, but changing employers now comes with potential legal landmines. Before you jump ship for a better comp plan or shinier technology platform, you better consult an attorney and understand exactly what you signed when you took your current job. That non-solicitation agreement you didn't read? It might prevent you from contacting any of your existing clients for a year or more. That confidentiality provision? It could prohibit you from even discussing your current company's rate sheets or pricing strategy with your new employer.

The gorilla poop incident, while admittedly hilarious, also highlights how personal and ugly these disputes can become. When we're talking about people's livelihoods, their professional reputations, and millions of dollars in damages, emotions run high. The mortgage industry has always been competitive, but we're entering an era where competition could easily cross into vindictiveness. Companies and individuals need to think carefully about how they conduct themselves, because the internet is forever and discovery is comprehensive.

Want to stay ahead of the industry's wildest drama, biggest legal battles, and most important strategic shifts—delivered with just enough snark to keep your Monday morning interesting? Subscribe to Well That Makes Sense at WellThatMakesSense.com. We promise no gorilla poop, but we can't guarantee you won't find glitter in your keyboard after reading our take on the mortgage industry's most entertaining moments. Because in this business, if you're not laughing, you're probably crying into your compliance manual.

Mortgage Today (PM) - 06/16/26 {{catlist}}
June 16, 2026
READ MORE **WTMS Blog Today = What's up in Mortgage Today (PM) - 06/16/2026** Mortgage-backed securities posted modest gains today as overnight strength from European peace deal trading persisted into the domestic session, though the 10-year Treasury yield found resistance at the 4.42% floor and bounced higher by day's end. MBS prices improved across all coupons, with UMBS 5.5 coupons gaining 0.13 points and GNMA 5.0 coupons up 0.16 points as of afternoon trading, signaling cautious optimism in the fixed-income complex. Treasury yields declined across the entire curve, with the 10-year down 3.2 basis points to 4.441% and the 5-year falling 3.3 basis points, reflecting a broad flight to safety early in the session. Economic data released today painted a mixed picture: ADP employment came in below expectations at 25.5K versus 29K prior, while housing starts disappointed at 1.177M against a 1.43M forecast, suggesting potential cooling in the labor and construction sectors. The market's technical resistance at 4.42% on 10-year yields remains critical—a decisive break through that level could unlock further gains, but investors should remain defensive until confirmed. For mortgage originators managing client rate locks, today's price action underscores the importance of watching key technical thresholds rather than chasing daily volatility. The bounce off 4.42% suggests traders view that level as legitimate support for yields, meaning a 4.57% lock ceiling strategy would signal caution unless or until the market breaks decisively lower. **Locking vs Floating** Technical analysis matters for managing rate-lock decisions. The 10-year yield hit a floor near 4.42% and bounced intraday, hitting resistance before closing slightly higher. For borrowers floating with a 4.57% lock trigger, today's action suggests waiting for a definitive break below 4.42% before pulling the trigger; otherwise, defensiveness is warranted until momentum confirms direction. **Today's Events** ADP Employment Change Weekly: 25.5K vs 29K prior, forecast miss Building Permits (May): 1.413M vs 1.42M forecast, 1.423M prior Housing Starts (May): 1.177M vs 1.43M forecast, 1.465M prior Import Prices (May): 1.9% vs 1.0% forecast, 1.9% prior **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
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