Mortgage rates bounced back up today as the underlying bond market continued the selling trend seen on 3 out of 4 days so far this week. In the overnight hours, bond yields (which generally correlate with mortgage rates) moved higher in concert with rising oil prices. That said, it would be a mistake to assume this is the only correlation in town. Oil prices continued to rise sharply during domestic hours, but bond yields remained flat–possibly benefiting from safe-haven demand following heavy losses in stocks. The average top-tier 30yr fixed rate is still under its recent highs, but after today’s jump, it’s fairly close. This is a victory of sorts, considering 10yr Treasury yields are clearly above their recent highs. [thirtyyearmortgagerates]
Tag Archives: mortgage fraud news
Dueling Narratives Leave Yields Higher Ahead of Jobs Report
Dueling Narrative Leave Yields Higher Ahead of Jobs Report
In the overnight session yields followed oil prices higher, but notably, Treasuries continued to sell even after oil leveled off. Then during domestic hours, it was Treasuries’ turn to level off while oil prices spiked. From 9am to 2pm, oil rose nearly $5/bbl while Treasury yields remained completely flat. One way to justify this would be via safe-haven demand from heavy stock losses, but we continue not loving that explanation because it is even less reliably correlated than bonds vs oil. At this point, we’re simply hoping that the jobs report helps restore some sense of normal market/data correlation, but at this point, anything’s possible.
Econ Data / Events
Challenger layoffs (Feb)
48.307K vs — f’cast, 108.435K prev
Continued Claims (Feb)/21
1,868K vs 1850K f’cast, 1833K prev
Import prices mm (Jan)
0.2% vs 0.2% f’cast, 0.1% prev
Jobless Claims (Feb)/28
213K vs 215K f’cast, 212K prev
Market Movement Recap
08:51 AM Weaker overnight and little-changed after data. MBS down just over an eighth and 10yr up 3.6bps at 4.136
12:23 PM sideways at weaker levels. MBS down 5 ticks (.16) and 10yr up 3.6bps at 4.136
02:35 PM sideways at similar levels. MBS down 6 ticks (.19) and 10yr up 3.4bps at 4.134
10yr Breaking Above 4.10% After Overnight weakness
The bond market has already shown an indifference to this week’s econ data as a market mover (even though we expect that to change with tomorrow’s jobs report). This morning, however, the trend continues with stronger jobless claims and a big uptick in labor costs failing to inspire a reaction. But there has been movement. A steady wave of overnight selling pushed 10yr yields more than 3bps higher, easily breaking above the 4.10% technical level. Attempting to clearly connect that move to underlying motivation is an imperfect science, yet again. Oil prices and yields continue to correlate, but yields rose faster on a relative basis.
The Best Large Mortgage Companies to Work for in 2026
These home lenders with 500 or more employees are considered among their staffs the best mortgage company to work for in 2026.
Lenders offer pricing promos in anticipation of a hot market
Rate discounts are available for both refinance and purchase mortgage applications from several lenders including UWM, Carrington, Chase and Silver Hill.
‘Software will get liberated’: How to survive the SaaSpocalypse
Banks like Grasshopper are already starting to use AI agents where in the past they would have bought software as a service.
Trigger lead limits push lenders toward new marketing
Industry participants are turning to trade organizations, vendors and each other to barnstorm ways to get more out of their marketing spend and remain compliant.
Rate moves into auto lending via app
Chicago-based mortgage lender Rate is partnering with Westlake Financial to offer in-app auto loans, advancing its push into product diversification and broader household financial services.
Calmer Start. Uneventful ADP. Waiting on ISM
After 2 days of much higher volatility at the open, bonds are roughly unchanged so far this morning and the overnight session was noticeably calmer. Today’s big ticket data includes ADP Employment and ISM Services. The former is already out (63k vs 50k, with a negative revision about the same size as the beat) and not moving markets. With that, we wait for ISM Services at 10am ET–arguably a much more capable market mover on average. With 10s trading in the 4.07’s currently, 4.10% increasingly looks like a technical ceiling.
AOT Execution, CRM, Advisory, Virtual Economist, Non-QM Tools; Redwood’s First Non-QM Deal
Credit is certainly a topic as of late, both its process and its cost, but I received this note from an industry vet in the South. “Rob, I’m tired of lenders having ‘a come apart’ over FICO’s costs. No one talks about the fact that FICO held its prices steady for over 20 years, and the 1400 percent price increase came from a base of 69 cents. I don’t think FICO is running away from competition. Everyone is talking about ‘1B’ (one bureau), but the bigger issue is lender choice, where the lender or LO chooses which score they’re going to use. Not all the bureaus have the same data, and that opens the door to adverse selection, increased risk, and gaming, which all leads to increased costs to consumers.” While we’re talking credit, here in Florida at the Lenders One Summit, I spoke to a few people about what they were doing to try to save money, and a few of them mentioned FICO’s Direct License Program. (Today’s podcast can be found here and this week’s ‘casts are sponsored by Feewise, which turns mortgage compliance from bottleneck to business accelerator. Handle all the complexities involved with establishing TRID compliant fees and disclosures, achieve sign off, and deliver packages to your consumers for review or signature. Hear an interview with Depth’s Lindsey Neal on modern relationship management, marketing, and PR strategies in the mortgage industry.) Products, Services, and Software for Brokers and Lenders “Spring is the season for fresh starts… even better to have a fresh start at prime minus 0.25% margin start rate! Take advantage of Symmetry’s Concurrent or Post-Close Piggyback Special and give your borrowers a smart solution to help them move forward with confidence. This offer is available for borrowers with a 760+ mid FICO, a minimum $300K draw at closing, and up to 80% max CLTV on primary residence Piggyback HELOC transactions. It features a 5-year draw term, with a 10-year draw term available for a +0.25% margin add-on. Your borrower’s home has been working hard for them, and now it’s time to help them reach their financial goals. Symmetry Lending.”
