Shaw, which was part of last year’s standstill agreement with Third Point, said it will support shareholder-driven change on Costar’s board.
Tag Archives: mortgage fraud news
Bessent offers deregulatory vision, but few specifics
In a contentious House Financial Services Committee oversight hearing, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent sidestepped questions on the Trump family crypto conflicts of interest and inflation with pugnacious responses to Democratic lawmakers’ questions.
HEIs see boost from investors but also legal setbacks
Home equity investment platforms continue to attract dollars from the venture capital community but also face a proposed de facto ban in one state.
ADP jobs miss barely registers in choppy Treasury trade
Despite a weak ADP jobs print, Treasury yields went nowhere, reinforcing a growing bearish, defensive case for rates, according to the CEO of IF Securities.
UWM’s Justin Ishbia raises $400 million for new industrial fund
Shore Capital Partners, a Chicago-based private equity firm founded by billionaire Justin Ishbia, has raised more than $400 million for its second industrial fund.
Blockchain, NOO HELOC, RON Tools; Better.com CEO’s Thoughts; IMB Conference Observations; CFPB Update
Products, Services, and Software for Brokers and Lenders Can AI help you spot the lending bias you can’t see? In his CEO Magazine Podcast interview, Optimal Blue CEO Joe Tyrrell shares the company’s platform-wide AI strategy to help reduce human bias in lending decisions. Instead of replacing lending teams, AI at Optimal Blue is built as a suite of assistants, including Originator Assistant in the Optimal Blue® PPE, which reviews a wide range of loan programs and surfaces options a human might not typically consider. Grounded in clearly defined use cases, transparent prompts, extensive customer testing, and human oversight, Optimal Blue deploys AI solutions designed to deliver value while helping to mitigate forms of human bias. Curious what a modern, proven AI strategy looks like? Check out the video of Optimal Blue CEO Joe Tyrrell on the CEO Magazine Podcast today. In a fluctuating market, efficient servicing is vital, especially with foreclosure rates up 14 percent since 2024 and serious delinquencies in the FHA sector accounting for more than twice the amount of any other loan type. To effectively manage this critical revenue stream, more servicers are streamlining loss mitigation through remote online notarization (RON). By integrating NotaryCam and RON into its workflow, one servicer cut notarization errors by 50 percent, resulting in fewer document exceptions, faster turnaround, and better borrower experiences. A large subservicer cited significantly reduced turn times and warehouse line carrying costs, thus delivering wins for clients and borrowers, through its partnership with NotaryCam. NotaryCam delivers secure, compliant notarization for loan modifications and loss mitigation packages. Its flexible integrations and experienced in-house notaries support operational efficiency and borrower retention everywhere RON is permitted. Visit Booth 610 or schedule a meeting at MBA Servicing to explore how NotaryCam powers modern servicing workflows.
Mortgage Rates Hold Perfectly Steady at 2-Week Highs
The average top tier 30yr fixed mortgage rate hit its highest levels in 2 weeks yesterday. The caveat was that the range has been very narrow during these 2 weeks. As such, by remaining unchanged versus yesterday, today’s rates are part of the same narrow range (6.15-6.20% for MND’s index). There were two relevant economic reports this morning as well as an update from the Treasury department regarding borrowing expectations. The latter is important for interest rates because the level of Treasury issuance is a primary ingredient in determining almost any consumer lending rate in the U.S. Higher issuance would increase the supply of bonds. Higher bond supply would decrease the price of bonds. And when bond prices fall, rates move higher, all else equal. This morning’s update kept issuance unchanged in the short term, but noted the probability of increased issuance in the next fiscal year. This put some upward pressure on rates early in the day, but a tame report on the services sector helped bonds find their footing. Flat bonds = flat rates. The end.
No Whammies in Wednesday’s Data. JOLTS Rescheduled for Thursday
No Whammies in Wednesday’s Data. JOLTS Rescheduled for Thursday
With the big jobs report on hold until next Wednesday, this morning’s ADP/ISM duo had to do most of the week’s heavy lifting in terms of important econ data. The response was underwhelming, at best. ADP was a complete non-event, but also fairly close to consensus. ISM was mixed and generally helped bonds hold their ground with yields moving down from highs at 10am. The day’s range remained inside yesterday’s and there were minimal losses by the 3pm close. The JOLTS data that was scheduled for Tuesday will now be coming out on Thursday morning.
Econ Data / Events
ADP Employment
22k vs 48k f’cast, 41k prev
ISM Biz Activity (Jan)
57.4 vs 56.0 prev
ISM N-Mfg PMI (Jan)
53.8 vs 53.5 f’cast, 54.4 prev
ISM Services Employment (Jan)
50.3 vs 52.3 f’cast, 52.0 prev
ISM Services New Orders (Jan)
53.1 vs 57.9 prev
ISM Services Prices (Jan)
66.6 vs 64.3 prev
Market Movement Recap
08:24 AM No major reaction to ADP data. MBS down 2 ticks (.06) and 10yr up 0.7bps at 4.27
10:03 AM Weaker ISM Services and a slight rally in bonds. 10yr was 4.29, but now down to 4.272. MBS are 2 ticks (.06) off the lows, but still down 2 ticks on the day.
02:53 PM MBS down 3 ticks (.09) and 10yr up 1.3bps at 4.276
Waiting on ISM Services as Early Data Fails to Inspire
Today’s two key reports are ADP Employment (8:15am ET) and ISM Services (10am ET). The former came out a bit softer than expected, but bonds didn’t react. 15 minutes later, Treasury released financing estimates for the quarter. These were as-expected and unchanged from the previous quarter, but Treasury noted that issuance would likely need to increase in fiscal year 2027. Higher issuance = higher rates, all else equal. This wasn’t necessarily a surprise or even “new” info, but the reminder may have been worth a bit of selling at 8:30am. ISM remains the day’s biggest source of potential volatility.
Home equity slips to 4-year low as underwater loans rise
Less than 45% of mortgage residential properties in the United States were equity-rich last quarter, a 1.5-percentage-point drop from the third quarter.
