Coaching; Workflow, LO Mobile App, AI Products; Economist Selma Hepp Interview

Nearly a thousand of us head to Manhattan in less than a week for the MBA’s Secondary Conference. In 2025 Q1, the median asking rent in New York City registered at $3,397, an increase of $179, or 5.6%, compared with a year ago. Sounds appropriate, given wage growth. In other rental news, the Missouri legislature passed a bill allowing landlords to discriminate against low-income renters. The Missouri Senate gave final approval to House Bill 595 which would prevent cities from enacting certain renter protections. This Bill was prompted by local legislation in some communities, most notably Kansas City, which bans landlords from denying leases to renters on the grounds that they receive housing assistance. Bill 595 would prevent cities from banning that practice, sometimes called source-of-income discrimination. One of the most common types of housing assistance is federal Section 8 housing vouchers, which allow low-income renters to have a portion of their rent covered by the government. State and federal government policy will be one of the topics on today’s episode of Now Next Later at 10AM PT. Sasha and Jeremy sit down with Taylor Stork, President of the Community Home Lenders of America, to reflect on CHLA’s recent Spring Fly-in in Washington, D.C., major policy discussions, key industry concerns, and how mortgage professionals can remain involved in shaping the future of lending. (Today’s podcast can be found here and Sponsored by TRUE and its Mortgage Operations Service (MOS) AI background worker, which transforms borrower documents into instant, trustworthy data for real-time decisioning. TRUE helps lenders accelerate decisions, cut costs, and deliver superior borrower experience, all without a $100M tech budget. Hear an interview with Cotality’s Selma Hepp on the complex dynamics of the 2025 spring housing market, offering a nuanced view of the pressures and opportunities shaping today’s buyers, sellers, and lenders.)