Yields on the 10-year Treasury have been climbing because of the Moody’s U.S. downgrade, the tax bill under debate in Congress and possible GSE reform.
Tag Archives: mortgage fraud
What’s in the ‘big, beautiful’ Trump tax bill for lenders?
The Republican-led bill heading to the Senate extends and expands numerous business and consumer tax benefits included in Trump’s 2017 cuts.
Mortgage Rates Edge Down From Recent Highs, But Remain Over 7%
Mortgage rates hit their highest level in just over 3 months yesterday with financial markets generally protesting the absence of more serious spending cuts in the spending bill. Rates care about fiscal spending because higher spending requires higher Treasury issuance which, in turn, pushes rates higher, all else equal. Although the House passed the bill early this morning, financial markets were already fairly well braced for the impact. Now that the Senate is saying the bill likely won’t reach the President’s desk until late Summer, markets are able to pause and reflect. One conclusion that some investors are coming to is that yields on US Treasuries are increasingly attractive as they move up through the 4% range (and in the case of 30yr bonds, the 5% range). When investors buy more bonds, it puts downward pressure on rates. As far as today was concerned, it didn’t amount to much in terms of movement versus yesterday. The average lender is just a hair lower, but still over 7% for top tier 30yr fixed scenarios.
Slightly Stronger Because Not Every Day Can be Weaker
Slightly Stronger Because Not Every Day Can be Weaker
Bond yields have moved almost exclusively higher in May. At the very least, they’ve been in an incredibly linear uptrend. Uptrends wouldn’t last very long if there wasn’t some push and pull (think 2 steps forward, 1 step back). And that brings us to the best case for today’s gains: sellers are taking a breath. Not every day can be a sell-off. To be sure, the gains weren’t inspired by data or any new fiscal developments. We can attempt to force the mid-day pop to fit a fiscal narrative based on a comment on the Senate’s time frame for a vote, but we could just as easily say it was position-squaring ahead of a holiday weekend with traders leaving at lunch time today and not coming back until the middle of next week.
Econ Data / Events
Jobless Claims
227k vs 230k f’cast, 229k prev
Continued Claims
1903k vs 1890k f’cast, 1867k prev
S&P Services PMI
52.3 vs 50.8 f’cast, 50.8 prev
S&P Manufacturing PMI
52.3 vs 50.1 f’cast, 50.2 prev
Market Movement Recap
09:25 AM modestly weaker after spending bill passage, but back to unchanged in MBS now. 10yr down 1.3bps at 4.588
12:19 PM Nice rebound, perhaps on news that spending bill could take all summer. MBS up 6 ticks (.19) and 10yr down 6bps at 4.542
04:27 PM Heading out near best levels with 10yr down 6.3bps at 4.538 and MBS up nearly a quarter point.
Conspicuous Absence of Volatility After Data and Spending Bill Vote
The most significant development of the overnight session was the early morning passage of the spending bill in the House. This resulted in only a modest extension of losses in stocks/bonds, mostly because stocks/bonds (mostly bonds) have been pricing this in throughout the week. Yields actually managed to recover into positive territory before the 9:45am ET econ data, and haven’t changed much since then. All in all, an exceptionally underwhelming level of volatility given the news and the fact that this is our only real morning of econ data this week.
Non-QM, QC Trends, Past Borrower Mining Tools; House Passes Spending Bill; Webinars Through Month-End
Yesterday I headed west from the conference while my son Robbie headed south to the nCino nSight event. But while in Manhattan Dawn S. asked me, “How do you know if there’s a vegan at your party?” Answer: “They’ll tell you.” It’s not hard to find someone to tell you why the “Sell America” trade is rampant in the financial markets, impacting rates and borrowers, and reminding us that politics and lending are indeed entwined. The U.S. should curb its “ever-increasing” debt burden, said Gita Gopinath, First Deputy Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund, in an interview with the Financial Times published Tuesday. Recall that Moody’s downgraded the U.S. credit rating due to rising government debt and interest payments, and as fiscal analysts raise concerns over Donald Trump’s proposal to extend and expand tax cuts. Gopinath noted that recent developments, including a truce on tariffs between the US and China and a US-UK trade agreement, are positive, but said “very elevated” trade policy uncertainty continues to affect the US economy. The IMF lowered its US growth forecast in April, citing trade tensions as a significant factor. The nation’s growing debt reflects a persistent imbalance between government spending and revenue, with no clear reversal in sight: regardless of party, no politician seems to be able to say no. (Today’s podcast can be found here and this week’s is sponsored by Xactus and its commitment to the continued transformation of the mortgage verification industry. Pioneering a new class of technology, “Intelligent Verification,” Xactus is redefining how the industry originates and services mortgages. Today’s has an interview with Finance of America’s Ashley Smith and Ryan Schmidt on why reverse mortgages deserve more attention from the broader mortgage industry and what’s holding back adoption.)
Credit score stocks slide as FHFA head questions pricing
Fair Isaac Corp.’s shares saw their worst day since March 2020 on Wednesday, falling alongside credit bureau stocks after the head of the Federal Housing Finance Agency questioned credit report pricing.
Mortgage rates rise to three-month high, slowing home demand
The contract rate on a 30-year mortgage rose 6 basis points to 6.92% in the week ended May 16, according to Mortgage Bankers Association data released Wednesday.
Trump floats a public offering for Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac
The president said he would consult with the heads of Treasury, the Commerce Department and the Federal Housing Finance Agency he comes to a decision.
Lenders bet on e-notes as adoption ramps up
Getting settlement agents and other stakeholders involved was a challenge, but e-note use has finally become routine for some mortgage lenders buying loans.
