Home Equity, Borrower Mining, Flood Tools; Milliman/MorVest Deal; Credit Cost News; Prepayments Slowing

“Seminar ‘How to avoid frauds’ is canceled. Tickets are non-refundable.” Collectively, we don’t want mortgage fraud, right? It’s a non-partisan issue. A grand jury rejected a new mortgage fraud indictment against New York Attorney General Letitia James. Meanwhile, it must be difficult living under a constant microscope, and yesterday a story broke that “Trump’s Own Mortgages Match His Description of Mortgage Fraud.” (Government watchers also noted that Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent announced that he has “divested” himself of North Dakota soybean farmland while President Trump has announced a $12 billion aid package for farmers impacted by trade policies.) Capital markets staff are focused on many things, including combatting fraud since it is illegal and impacts everyone from borrowers to investors. Today’s Capital Markets Wrap, at 3PM ET and presented by Polly, the group addresses many of the general topics facing the industry: the December slowdown in MBS trading, the Fed meeting, 2026 forecasts that hint at brief refinance openings, higher conforming loan limits, record home equity, first-time homebuyer trends, and how new trigger-lead rules may affect recapture strategies next year. One topic unlikely to be covered is artificial intelligence, but don’t worry: In his latest heavily footnoted Mortgage Musing, attorney Brian Levy offers his unique perspective on the role of AI in the mortgage industry and the hard work needed to lower the cost of mortgage loan production. (Sign up for free to get an email from Mortgage Musings whenever Levy posts a new one by subscribing here.) (Today’s podcast can be found here and this week’s are sponsored by Lenders One. Lenders One is dedicated to helping independent mortgage bankers, banks and credit unions reduce costs, improve profitability, and operate competitively in the mortgage industry and within their communities. Hear an interview with Fairwinds Magda DeMauro on how lenders can overcome regulatory and operational barriers, use education, adopt strategic overlays, and embrace emerging tools to offer more flexible, innovative credit decisions that help better support borrowers seeking new or alternative paths to homeownership.)