HELOCs and 2nds, Doc Tracking, Execution, POS, Webinars and Training; Rates Steady Despite Iran Conflict

For many, business is slow out there, and the industry waits for the House vote on the abusive trigger lead bill. Depository banks continue to focus on residential lending in their own footprint while scaling back distant originations, and IMBs continue to look at staffing with a critical eye. A safe prediction is that this will continue, although people have grown more skeptical of others making predictions to grab headlines. A recession has yet to materialize, nor has a tidal wave of delinquencies and foreclosures. In fact, quite the opposite: The OCC Mortgage Metrics Report, First Quarter 2025 showed that 97.6 percent of mortgages included in the report were current and performing at the end of the quarter, an increase from 97.4 percent one year earlier. And The percentage of seriously delinquent mortgages decreased from the first quarter of 2024. MLOs motor forward and on today’s episode of Now Next Later at 10am PT, Sasha and Jeremy welcome Jake Vermillion, CMO at Mortgage Champions, to discuss the evolving role of mortgage loan officers and its impact on training and performance. (Today’s podcast can be found here and this week is sponsored by Optimal Blue. OB bridges the primary and secondary mortgage markets to deliver the industry’s only end-to-end capital markets platform, helping lenders maximize profitability and operate efficiently so they can help American borrowers achieve the dream of homeownership. Today’s has an interview with Argyle’s John Hardesty on what’s driving lender migration in the LOS and POS space, how tech stacks are being evaluated more strategically, why “conversion” matters more than ever in verification workflows, and what true interoperability means for mortgage fintech.)

Bonds Don’t Always React to “War” Like You’d Expect

A vast majority of long-time bond watchers share the same general understanding of how war impacts rates. Specifically, the increased global economic uncertainty drives safe-haven demand for US Treasuries, thus helping rates. While this CAN be true, it’s not a hard and fast rule. Consider the Russia/Ukraine example in which an initial drop in rates gave way to a paradoxical spike due to inflation implications. Keen observers anticipated a similar risk over the weekend with respect to oil prices. Alas! Not only have oil prices barely budged over the weekend, but bonds didn’t respond as expected when they initially spiked 2 weeks ago.

Over the weekend, there was initially no reaction whatsoever.  As the day gets underway, bonds are stronger–partially due to reports that there was no radioactive contamination after the attack and partially due to unrelated dovish comments from Fed’s Bowman.

Underwhelming (But Friendly) Conclusion

Underwhelming (But Friendly) Conclusion

The present week didn’t manage to offer nearly as much excitement as the previous few examples, but that’s not necessarily a bad thing considering yields/rates are near the lower boundary of their recent ranges.  Today looked like it may have been a higher rate day at the start of the session, but bonds arrested the selling trend and reversed course after dovish comments from Fed’s Waller. Europe’s close was also beneficial for US bonds, helping us get all the way back into modestly stronger territory before trading levels flat-lined into the U.S. close. 

Econ Data / Events

Philly Fed Index 

-4.0 vs -1 f’cast, -4.0 prev

Leading Indicator Index

-0.1 vs -0.1 f’cast, -1.0 prev

Market Movement Recap

10:09 AM Moderately weaker overnight, following European bonds, but bouncing back a bit after AM data. MBS down 1 tick (.03) and 10yr up 2.7bps at 4.419

12:20 PM Decent rally at 11am. 10yr now down 1bp at 4.382.  MBS up 3 ticks (.09).

03:09 PM flat all afternoon.  10yr down 1.8bps at 4.374 and MBS up 5 ticks (.16). 

Housing Starts Slide in May, But Single-Family Holds Steady

The latest Residential Construction report from the Census Bureau showed a noticeable drop in overall housing starts in May, though single-family activity managed a small gain. Building permits also declined, continuing a trend of slight cooling in new construction momentum. As usual, the market focuses most on building permits and housing starts , with the latter representing the beginning of actual construction activity. Total starts fell nearly 10% to an annual pace of 1.256 million , down from 1.392 million in April. The decline was almost entirely due to a sharp drop in multifamily starts , which fell from 420k to 316k , the lowest level in over a year. In contrast, single-family starts edged up slightly to 924k from 920k . Building permits—a forward-looking indicator—also declined, dropping 2% from 1.422 million to 1.393 million . That included a 2.7% decline in single-family permits and a moderate slowdown in multifamily authorizations.

Mortgage Applications Slip Despite Lower Rates

Mortgage application activity declined modestly last week despite a drop in rates, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association’s (MBA) latest survey. The Composite Index fell 2.6% on a seasonally adjusted basis for the week ending June 13, with both purchase and refinance activity posting week-over-week declines. “Even with lower average mortgage rates, applications declined over the week as ongoing economic uncertainty weighed on potential homebuyers’ purchase decisions,” said Joel Kan, MBA’s Vice President and Deputy Chief Economist. Refinance applications were down 2% from the prior week but remain 25% higher than the same week last year. Purchase applications fell 3% on a seasonally adjusted basis but are still 14% above 2024 levels. These declines come after a brief rebound in early June and underscore the fragile sentiment in the housing market. The average 30-year fixed rate decreased to 6.84%, the lowest level since April, with modest declines across most other loan types as well. Mortgage Rate Summary:

30yr Fixed: 6.84% (−0.09) | Points: 0.66 (+0.02)

15yr Fixed: 6.14% (−0.02) | Points: 0.70 (+0.04)

Jumbo 30yr: 6.81% (−0.12) | Points: 0.63 (no change)

FHA: 6.57% (−0.03) | Points: 0.90 (+0.02)

5/1 ARM: 6.10% (−0.12) | Points: 0.57 (+0.24)