The regulator, in an audit with the Department of Homeland Security, found almost 6,000 ineligible non-American tenants in the units it supports.
Tag Archives: mortgage fraud news
Treasuries extend gains after strong two-year note auction
The $69 billion sale of two-year notes was awarded at 3.580%, more than a basis point below its yield at the bidding deadline.
Ginnie Mae speeds up loan-level MBS overhaul
The government mortgage securitization guarantor flagged the goal back during the first Trump administration, warning then that it would be a long-term project.
Record senior equity shifts to heirs, not the open market
A record amount of equity is now held by property owners 62 and older, with a growing share transferring homes to their heirs and not putting them up for sale.
Onity’s earnings estimates improve despite servicing loss
The estimated range for net income to common shareholders at the company formerly known as Ocwen rose in part due to a deferred tax asset valuation.
Small, Steady Gains and MBS Outperformance
Small, Steady Gains and MBS Outperformance
It was a relatively quiet Monday for the bond market, but not a bad one. Treasuries were modestly stronger overnight and MBS opened a few ticks higher. Durable goods data was much stronger than expected, but had no discernible impact. 10yr yields hit their lows of the day at 10:30am and then drifted sideways at just slightly higher (but still positive) levels. MBS, on the other hand, continued making modest gains throughout the day. Part of this had to do with yield curve steepening (i.e. shorter term yields fell more during the day, and MBS align with Treasuries that are a bit shorter than the 10yr note with which they’re most frequently compared). But MBS also modestly outperformed even the 5yr Treasury yield–a fact that suggests some GSE bond buying may have contributed to spread tightening.
Econ Data / Events
Core CapEx (Nov)
0.7% vs — f’cast, 0.5% prev
Durable goods (Nov)
5.3% vs 3.7% f’cast, -2.2% prev
Market Movement Recap
08:43 AM Slightly stronger overnight. Modest pull-back after Durable Goods. MBS unchanged and 10yr down half a bp at 4.226
12:17 PM 10yr down 1.3bps at 4.215 but off best levels of 4.203 around 10:30am. MBS up 2 ticks (.06) and at best levels of the day, perhaps signifying some GSE purchases behind the scenes.
03:17 PM Sideways in Treasuries with 10yr down 1.9bps at 4.21. MBS at highs, up an eighth of a point.
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Lowest Mortgage Rates in Just Over a Week
Mortgage rates trickled modestly lower again today for the 4th straight business day on Monday. The average top-tier 30yr fixed rate is the lowest it’s been since January 16th. The only catch is that it was quite a bit lower 2 weeks ago. Compared to today’s mark of 6.17% on MND’s daily rate index, mid-January lows ranged from 5.99 to 6.07%. Note: in the following chart, 6.01 is the lowest mark, but in intraday terms, January 9th saw 5.99 for the better part of the day. [thirtyyearmortgagerates] There were no major source of volatility today and the week ahead is generally lacking in terms of potential sources. Even Wednesday’s Fed announcement is unlikely to have much of an impact this time around as the outcome is already fully priced in by financial markets. Specifically, the Fed is not cutting rates at this meeting and there’s not much they can say that hasn’t already been said multiple times in recent Fed speeches.
Starting Fairly Flat After Spicy But Stale Durable Goods
This week’s only marquee calendar event is Wednesday’s Fed announcement, and it’s unclear what the Fed could possibly do or say to inspire much of a reaction at this meeting. That leaves the heavy lifting to be done by the likes of the Producer Price Index (PPI) on Friday–a report that often has no impact and only occasionally fills the role of supporting actor. This morning’s Durable Goods data has perhaps even less influence and that’s good for fans of low rates because it crushed forecasts, coming in at 5.3 vs 3.7.
If you squint, you can imagine a small reaction to the tune of half a bp of weakness in 10yr yields, but that’s not enough movement to merit more than a passing glance. In any event, yields quickly returned below 8:30am levels, leaving us relatively flat in early trading.
Consumer sentiment reaches five-month high in broad gain
US consumer sentiment increased to a five-month high in January as Americans grew more optimistic about the economy and their finances.
