Unusual spikes in property taxes and insurance in many areas are causing servicing concerns that mortgage companies may not be used to managing.
Tag Archives: mortgage fraud news
Fed’s Bowman: Balance sheet reduction effort slowing too soon
In a speech, the Federal Reserve governor said she would have liked to see the Federal Open Market Committee move more quickly to reduce its holdings. The central bank is poised to begin slowing the pace of balance sheet runoff this week.
Relatively Sharp Losses, but Nothing Special in The Bigger Picture
Relatively Sharp Losses, but Nothing Special in The Bigger Picture
Bonds began the day modestly stronger, and that was their first mistake. Starting around 10am, the gains began evaporating following comments from Fed’s Kashkari (who needs to see “many” more months of good inflation before considering a cut) and a big pop in consumer confidence data. In the next 3 hours, both the 2yr and 5yr Treasury auction would add to the pressure. MBS were only down a quarter point on the day, which is an unremarkable move for the first day back after a 3 day weekend, but in contrast to the low volatility gains in the first 2 hours of the day, it feels subjectively abrupt. Mortgage lenders concur, based on the number of reprices (and 2nd reprices).
Econ Data / Events
FHFA Home Prices
0.1 vs 0.5 f’cast, 1.2 prev
Case Shiller Home Prices
1.6 vs 0.9 prev
Consumer Confidence
102.0 vs 95.9 f’cast, 97.0 prev
Market Movement Recap
09:55 AM Sideways in a narrow range overnight. 10yr unchanged at 4.466. MBS up 3 ticks (.09).
10:23 AM Slightly weaker after confidence data and Fed comments. 10yr up 2 bps at 4.486. MBS up 1 tick (0.03), but down 3 ticks (0.09) from intraday highs.
11:37 AM More losses after 2yr auction. MBS down 2 ticks (.06) and 10yr up 3bps at 4.496
01:06 PM 10yr yields are now 5.6bps higher at 4.522 and MBS are down an eighth on the day
03:01 PM Weakest levels of the day with MBS down 9 ticks (.28) and 10yr yields up 7.4bps at 4.54
Limited Calendar, But Less Limited Than Last Week
Last week was notable for its absence of any notable developments–an outcome we considered to be the “guilty until proven innocent” baseline and the reason we referred to the past 11 days as an 11 day weekend. As the new, holiday-shortened week gets underway, bonds have yet to break outside the range boundaries from the 11 day weekend, but at the very least, there is more data on tap. In addition to Treasury auctions through Thursday, there is also a smattering of economic reports. We’re already seeing some reaction to this morning’s Consumer Confidence and 2yr Treasury auction, but the headliner in terms of potential volatility is Friday’s PCE inflation data.
Rates Jump to Highest Levels in More Than 3 Weeks
It was a mini rollercoaster of a day for mortgage rates with the average lender starting the day at lower levels than Friday only to end at the highest levels since May 3rd. The weakness was driven by a combination of economic data, comments from Fed officials, and weaker US Treasury auctions. There are several small consolations. First off, last week’s rates were already in line with 2 week highs. More importantly, the recent range is fairly narrow, meaning it didn’t take much of a jump in the bigger picture in order to see 3-week highs. The average lender is at least an eighth of a percent higher than they were for the equivalent scenario on Friday morning with top tier conventional 30yr fixed quotes in the 7.25% neighborhood
Social Security, LOS, AI Doc Assist Products; Webinars and Training; Turn Off Auto VOEs
“Scientists got together to study the effects of alcohol on a person’s walk, and the result was staggering.” The news impacting human life and property over the weekend was truly staggering, ranging from one (Bill Walton, basketball player) to possibly thousands (buried alive from a landslide in Papua New Guinea, north of Australia). More than 40 were killed in an Israeli strike against Hamas. Tornadoes tore through the middle of the United States, killing more than 20 and destroying thousands of structures. We talk about climate change, and global warming, yet now an airline has begun just to fly pets at $6k a pop. (What’s Bella’s money and carbon footprint now?) Meanwhile, at a micro level but impacting lives, lenders are continuing to try to save money, some by charging for VOEs (often based on regulations and practices at the state-level, but many loans have two or more VOEs run) or at least turning off the automatic running of VOEs and making the process manual. Lenders saving money and staying afloat has been a combination of many factors and will continue to be. (Found here, this week’s podcasts are sponsored by American Financial Resources, the mortgage lender that’s shaking things up by streamlining processes, bringing on the best humans in the business, and putting the customer experience front and center. Today’s features an interview with Prudent AI’s Paul Gigliotti on empowering lenders to pre-approve loans in one click.) Lender and Broker Services, Products, and Software
AI deepfakes and mortgages: how big is the risk?
The ease of producing a fake video means financial businesses and their clients stand at risk of being targeted by fraudsters.
Two new compliance firms on helping to save mortgage lenders money
A pair of recently created consulting firms seek to shift lender thinking to make compliance a front-of-mind target, not merely a cost center.
Will lenders get a pass on Ginnie Mae prepays?
Despite a recent warning about an uptick in prepays, FHA seems to be leaning in the direction of adopting changes that will increase them, writes the chairman of Whalen Global Advisors.
TD’s U.S. expansion plans called into question amid regulatory troubles
Executives at the Toronto-based bank said last year that they planned to add 150 branches in the United States. But when pressed on Thursday, they could not say how much they’ll scale back their ambitions due to investigations over TD’s anti-money laundering practices.
