The agency has a proposed repeal in place, getting ready to be made public on July 28, which would rescind another Biden-era fair housing policy.
Category Archives: Uncategorized
Private flood insurance growing as federal coverage recedes
Numbers on use and performance point to potential for nonpublic insurers to take on a greater role but also suggest there are limits to it, Fitch Ratings found.
GSEs could exit conservatorship fast, experts say
Given FHFA Director Bill Pulte’s history of making regulatory pronouncements via X, some theorize the release of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac could occur in the same way.
Bipartisan bill seeks to boost affordable housing
The Community Investment and Prosperity Act would increase the statutory cap for bank investment into community development projects, unlocking “billions in capital” that can be directed to affordable housing.
Primelending profits, but outlook still dim
Mortgage profits improved on both a quarterly and annual basis, but leaders said low housing affordability and industry competition remain obstacles to growth.
Trade Headlines Trump Durable Goods Data, But Minimal Change Either Way
Bonds were initially stronger, then weaker in the overnight session. There was a bit of additional selling in the first hour, but none of it corresponded with the 8:30am Durable Goods data. Notably, the data was much weaker than expected. This helps reinforce our lack of interest in this particular report as a potential market mover. Bigger volume followed a series of Trump comments just after 9am ET. Trump said he’s meeting with UK prime minister tonight, he doesn’t ever want a weaker dollar (incidentally, this is at odds with wanting rate cuts), he got the impression that Powell might be ready to lower rates, Powell is a very good man, most trade deals will be done by August 1, and that there’s a 50/50 chance of a trade deal with the EU. Your guess is as good as ours as to which of those accounted for the volume spike and bond reversal, but the EU comment lined up the best. Either way, movement has been too small to really care.
Mortgage Rates End Week Unchanged. Next Week, Probably Not…
It’s no great secret that the outgoing week didn’t offer much in terms of hotly anticipated events with the power to make or break momentum in the rate market. But as it happened, there was ultimately no impact whatsoever by the time Friday afternoon rolled around. Actually, rates were already ‘unchanged’ on the week as of yesterday afternoon. Friday just happened to be unchanged as well. In terms of the bond market movement underlying the mortgage rate stability, we got some help from headlines regarding the improvement in relations between the Trump admin and Fed Chair Powell. After touring the Fed’s construction site, the President said these sorts of cost overruns happen and he doesn’t want to put them in the category of “grounds for removal,” nor is there any pressure for Powell to resign. In general, the bond/rate market has done better during the moments where it looks like Powell’s job is safer. Conversely, longer term bonds/rates have done worse when faced with the prospect of a Fed Chair replacement that would lower short term rates more aggressively (seeming paradox, but actually quite logical to bond traders). For every degree to which the present week was calm and uneventful for rates, next week brings the heat. There are big ticket events on every single day and the biggest of tickets in the form of Friday’s jobs report. As always “potential” volatility doesn’t guarantee a big move in either direction. All we know is that odds are higher for big moves–especially after Friday’s data.
Bonds Brace For Stormier Weather After This Week’s Smooth Sailing
Bonds Brace For Stormier Weather After This Week’s Smooth Sailing
Despite a few inconsequential ups and downs, bonds ultimately traded with forgettable, sideways momentum this week. Friday did nothing to change that–especially after mid-day gains courtesy of optimism surrounding over-the-weekend trade talks between the U.S. and the EU. The gains corresponded with the news headlines about the U.S./EU meeting and bonds held steadily sideways after that. The incoming week is completely different in terms of calendar-based volatility potential. There are relevant events on every single day culminating with “peak relevance” in the form of Friday’s big jobs report.
Econ Data / Events
Durable Goods
-9.3 vs -10.8 f’cast, 16.5 prev
Core Durable Goods
-0.7 vs +0.2 f’cast, 2.0 prev
Market Movement Recap
10:48 AM Moderately weaker overnight and sideways to slightly stronger in the first few hours. MBS only down 1 tick (.03) and 10yr up 1.1bps at 4.409
01:31 PM Solid gains starting just after noon E.T. on US/EU trade talks set for Sunday. MBS now unchanged and 10yr down 1.4bps at 4.383
04:34 PM Mostly holding gains into the close. MBS up 1 tick (.03) and 10yr down 1.1bps at 4.387
HELOC Products; HUD, FHA, and Ginnie News; Unscripted Powell and Trump
If you want to see an unscripted moment where politics and the central bank collide, thank Ken Sonner for sending over this clip of President Trump and Fed Chair Powell addressing the press. (Complete with pressure for lower rates, a misstatement of the cost, and with the President taking his hard hat off because “there’s not too much danger.”) Every president through history has wanted lower rates to spur growth; Robbie Chrisman is in Rapid City, South Dakota, where he reports that growth is surging, which appeals to some but not those who “liked it the way it was.” Interest rates may be a topic on today’s episode of Last Word at 10am PT, Brian Vieaux, Christy Soukhamneut, Kevin Peranio, and Courtney Thompson. They will certainly explore the real factors driving up loan origination costs, focusing on sales compensation rather than just credit or insurance. They’ll also examine the housing market’s mixed signals, including rising refi activity, steady rates, and the implications of record-high home prices amid growing inventory and price cuts. (Today’s podcast can be found here and this week’s podcasts are sponsored by Wholesale Mortgage Direct (WMD), whose mission is to deliver high demand, innovative products unique to the wholesale industry, including MyEQNow, which is one-of-a-kind TraDigital HELOC platform. WMD is your trusted partner for innovative HELOC, NonQM and/or Reverse options. Today’s has excerpts from an interview with the MBA’s Bob Broeksmit on Mortgage Matters earlier this week addressing a variety of current action items on MBA’s docket.)
Credit scores are not the issue
FHFA’s surprise approval of VantageScore 4.0 raises concerns over data, implementation hurdles, and the politicized push to reform mortgage credit scoring, writes the Chairman of Whalen Global Advisors.
