Department of Housing and Urban Development officials indicated that there are improvements in some delinquency stages and cure rates are better than expected.
Tag Archives: mortgage fraud news
Northeast, West Coast make up the hottest rental markets
Providence, Rhode Island, headed Zillow’s hottest rental markets list, beating out New York and San Francisco, the company announced Monday.
Without GSEs’ bond buying, mortgage rates may be even higher
Secondary market experts are split on whether the Fed’s next move will be a rate decrease in 2027 or an increase, as more observers are now thinking.
Panorama Mortgage Group unifies channels under new name
All of the Las Vegas-based company’s channels, including Alterra Home Loans and Travisa Financial, will go by SimplyPMG, it announced Monday.
Judge OKs Wells Fargo’s $100 million mortgage borrower fund
In a settlement agreement last year, the bank will assist low- and-moderate income borrowers residing in, or buying homes in such Census tracts.
Mortgage Rates Start Week at New 9 Month High, But Just Barely
Mortgage rates hit their highest levels in more than 9 months at the end of last week. Now today, they’ve edged slightly higher yet again with the average top tier 30yr fixed rate at 6.68% versus 6.65% on Friday. This wasn’t necessarily destined to be the case today. In fact the day began with the average lender unchanged. But the underlying market remains highly attuned to breaking news on the Iran war. Earlier in the day, that news was helpful for rates as it spoke to the possibility of compromise on a peace deal. Subsequent headlines refuted the initial news, thus pushing the financial market back in the other direction (i.e. toward higher rates). The result was that the average lender recalled their initial rate offerings and re-released higher rates. Things were on track to be even worse this afternoon when Trump said he was cancelling a planned attack and that serious negotiations were taking place. This helped bonds recover some of the earlier losses, but not enough for lenders to make any friendly rate adjustments today.
Bombarded by Headlines, But Little-Changed
Bombarded by Headlines, But Little-Changed
Monday’s trading session ended up being an exercise in headline-watching, as has been the case on so many days since the start of the Iran war. Today was more active than normal in that regard. The earliest headlines (as covered in the AM commentary) were helpful until they weren’t. Subsequent headlines continued pushing back on the notion of an easy peace deal until 3pm. At that point, Trump posted that a planned military operation for tomorrow was cancelled and that serious negotiations were now taking place between great leaders and allies, and that a deal will be made. Bond yields and oil prices dropped on that one with Treasuries ultimately making it back to unchanged in the final hour of the session.
Market Movement Recap
08:55 AM Some early gains on war headlines. MBS up 5 ticks (.16) and 10yr down 1.8bps at 4.573
11:04 AM Gains fully erased as newswires push back on previous headlines. MBS down 1 tick (.03) and 10yr up 1.8bps at 4.61
02:48 PM New lows. MBS down a quarter point and 10yr up 2.7bps at 4.618
Early Gains And Losses on Conflicting War Headlines
Bonds began the overnight session by drifting somewhat higher in yield. The 10yr hit 4.63 before recovering modestly just before domestic trading began. Yields were still slightly higher at 7:30am but moved lower after headlines cited rumors that the U.S. agreed to lift Iran’s oil sanctions. Subsequent headlines cited a revised counter-proposal from Iran in which it would accept a long-term freeze of its nuclear program in exchange for a truce and gradual reopening of the Strait of Hormuz. Bonds rallied on both those newswires with 10s making it below 4.57. They’re since reversed course on a 3rd set of newswires citing Iran’s negotiators as saying U.S. demand remain excessive despite the changes in the draft proposal.
The chart below shows all 3 sets of newswires and the corresponding movement in oil/bonds with strong correlation.
Equity Tapping, Non-QM Hedging, AI Processing, Subservicing Tools; MBA Hallway Talk
For those of you who like maps, here’s one of the states’ closing costs. And here’s something for companies who have training programs: New hires should check out the Business Glossary from MISMO. It covers business processes, events, calculations, documents, forms, regulations, AI terminology, and more. LOs of various ages tell me that people in their 20s not only are inclined to rent to “see how the weather is” but also because of money. LendingTree’s latest report shows U.S. homeowners with a mortgage now pay 37 percent more per month than renters, underscoring how sharply monthly housing costs have climbed in recent years. “Rent wins in every major metro, even in the tightest markets. When it costs so much more to own than to rent every month, it forces people who want to own a home to face some tough decisions, including potentially having to relocate to another city in search of reasonably priced property. (Today’s podcast can be found here and this week’s ‘casts are sponsored by TransUnion. Discover how data-driven mortgage intelligence is helping lenders identify in-market borrowers, strengthen portfolio performance, personalize outreach, retain customers, and drive smarter growth in an increasingly competitive housing market. Today’s has an interview with Lower’s Craig Montgomery on how strategic leadership is shaping lender growth in 2026 through effective team building, evolving production trends, competitive retail execution, and strong real estate agent relationships.)
Two Harbors investor seeking to halt CrossCountry vote
A shareholder who claims no bias between United Wholesale Mortgage and CrossCountry Mortgage suggests the servicer must answer to recent allegations.
