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22nd May, 26 Pegasus Latest News
Mortgage Rates End Week Roughly Unchanged
Mortgage lenders rely on the bond market to generate mortgage rates. In addition to being fully closed on Monday for Memorial Day, bonds also close 3 hours earlier than normal on the preceding Friday (i.e. today). The abbreviated trading session was fairly uneventful for rates despite some back-and-forth volatility in response to diplomacy headlines surrounding Iran/US peace negotiations. The flow of news resulted in better bond market levels early in the day and a pull-back in the late AM hours. After accounting for some lenders' mid-day rate changes, the average lender ended the day right in
22nd May, 26 Pegasus Latest News
Builders Breaking Ground at Fastest Pace in 2 Years
Residential construction activity was mixed again in April, as building permits rebounded while housing starts pulled back modestly from March’s stronger pace. The latest Census Bureau data continues to reflect a construction sector navigating uneven demand and affordability pressures. Privately owned housing starts fell 2.8% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.465 million , down from March’s revised 1.507 million pace. Despite the monthly decline, starts were still 4.6% higher than April 2025 levels. Single-family starts dropped 9.0% to 930k, while multifamily starts (buildings with
22nd May, 26 Pegasus Latest News
Borrowers Shift Toward ARMs as Fixed Rates Climb
Mortgage applications pulled back last week as rising rates weighed on homebuyer demand, while refinance activity remained largely flat. The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) reported a 2.3% decrease in total application volume on a seasonally adjusted basis for the week ending May 15. The decline was driven primarily by softer purchase activity. The seasonally adjusted Purchase Index fell 4% from the prior week, though purchase demand remained 8% higher than the same week one year ago. Refinance activity was mostly unchanged despite the rise in rates. The Refinance Index dipped just 0.1%
22nd May, 26 Pegasus Latest News
Builder Sentiment Improves Slightly as Mortgage Rates Continue to Weigh on Demand
Builder confidence improved modestly in May, though sentiment remained subdued as elevated mortgage rates, affordability pressures, and broader economic uncertainty continued to weigh on the housing market. The National Association of Home Builders (NAHB)/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI) increased three points to 37 . While the gain marks a slight rebound from April’s decline, the index is still sitting below the threshold that signals broader builder optimism. All three major components of the index moved higher in May. The gauge measuring current sales conditions rose three points to
22nd May, 26 Pegasus Latest News
Credit and Verification, Warehouse, AI Processing Tools; Basel III Update; Rates Higher for Longer?
Wanna know the new buzz acronym? Residential Transition Loans (RTL): financing for properties in transition, including fix-and-flip, bridge, and rehab deals. Catch the wave… people always need to borrow money! Now, if only income guidelines by the Agencies matched how incomes have changed. Change is constant: “Rob, if you think inflation is bad, home insurance price increases in many parts of the nation are worse. When is the government going to address that?” I don’t know the answer to that: the government certainly is involved in lending, but not much so with insurance companies.
22nd May, 26 Pegasus Latest News
Abbreviated Friday Opening at Week's Best Levels
Bonds are starting the session at the best levels of the week with modest overnight gains getting a small boost from news that Pakistan's army chief (a central figure in mediating US/Iran peace talks) is en route to Tehran. Trading ends at 2pm today instead of 5pm, as is usually the case for a Friday before a Monday federal holiday. Econ data is light, but additional war headlines could still move the needle
21st May, 26 Pegasus Latest News
Peace Deal Rumors Make For Mid-Day Reversal
Peace Deal Rumors Make For Mid-Day Reversal Bonds started the day in fairly forgettable and slightly weaker fashion after overnight headlines suggested that the disposition of Iran's nuclear material remains a sticking point. Bonds were flat at weaker levels all morning. Then, just after 1pm, a different headline suggested a "draft agreement" was expected to be announced in a matter of hours. It listed several bullet points, but ironically, nuclear material was not on the list. Nonetheless, the bond market rallied into positive territory rather easily. As much of a head-scratcher as
21st May, 26 Pegasus Latest News
Mortgage Rates Recover After Starting Higher
After posting a decent recovery from 9-month highs yesterday, it looked like mortgage rates were destined to bounce back toward slightly higher levels today. In fact, when lenders released their initial rates this morning, the average 30yr fixed rate was indeed moderately higher. But shortly after 1pm ET, news broke regarding additional progress in the Iran war peace process. Much like many similar headlines of late, this one could easily unravel in the coming hours, but the bond market responded positively enough to erase the day's losses. In general, when bonds are gaining, rates move lower
21st May, 26 Pegasus Latest News
Hedging, Verification, Servicing, QC, Reverse Products; Road to Housing Bill Status
Lots of folks were leaving the MBA’s National Secondary yesterday, and many comments and questions were heard. “Did you hear that Jerry Seinfeld is doing a show at the MBA National in October?” (True) “Ginnie Mae began ratcheting up its cybersecurity efforts in 2024. Why aren’t others?” (Good question; I’m sure they are at some level.) “Most lenders are selling loans to the Agencies through their ‘cash windows’ on a whole loan basis rather than through MBS execution.” (True; Freddie and Fannie have increased gfees, so when capital markets staff are seeking every basis
21st May, 26 Pegasus Latest News
Bonds Turn Red Overnight on War Headlines
Bonds spent most of the overnight session moving sideways to slightly stronger, but everything changed at 6:20am. That's when news broke regarding a statement from Iran's Khamenei saying that Uranium should not leave the country. Given that this is a sticking point for peace negotiations, the response in bonds/oil/etc was immediate and clear. Yields rose from 4.575 to 4.62 and continue to trade near there ever since. While there was a decent little chunk of line items on the econ calendar at 8:30am this morning, none of them generated any volume or volatility