
Stocks are higher as fighting continues in Iran. Bonds and MBS are up small.
Ugly PPI report. Wholesale prices rose 1.1% in May, according to BLS. Nearly 80% of the increase was due to goods. Services rose 0.3%. Gasoline accounted for half the increase in goods. If you strip out food and energy, the numbers are still hideous. We had a 0.4% increase for the month, which works out to be 4.9% annually.
Bonds seem to be taking the number in stride, but this was a big miss.
Treasury did a 10 year auction yesterday. The yield came in at 4.538% with a bid / cover of 2.57. The bid / cover ratio of 2.57 indicates decent demand. International buyers were the aggressive ones.
Home equity withdrawals (i.e. seconds and cash-0ut refis) are increasing, according to the ICE Mortgage Monitor. With credit card debt at record highs, many borrowers are finding it makes sense to roll all of that 20% interest rate debt into a lower rate mortgage. Second-lien withdrawals hit an 18 year high, while cash-outs were the highest since 2021.
“The housing market continues to be defined by the lock-in effect,” said Andy Walden, Head of Mortgage and Housing Market Research at ICE. “Millions of homeowners are sitting on first mortgages with rates well below current market levels, making second liens and HELOCs an attractive way to access equity without giving up those loans. While higher mortgage rates have reduced refinance opportunities and softened affordability gains in recent months, home prices continue to firm across much of the country and affordability remains improved from year-ago levels.”
“As refinance opportunities become more limited, home equity products are playing a larger role in helping homeowners access liquidity and meet financial goals,” said Bob Hart, President of ICE Mortgage Technology. “Lenders that can effectively identify, engage and serve those borrowers across both mortgage and home equity channels will be best positioned to capitalize on evolving consumer demand.”
Loan officers who are not asking their existing borrowers about their other credit card debt are leaving money on the table. These products can save borrowers a lot of money.
US regulatory costs related to homebuilding increased 40% from 2021 to 2026, according to the NAHB. The study estimates that 26.4% of the cost of a new home (or over $131k) is caused by regulatory compliance.

It appears most of these costs are driven by state and local governments, so there is not good lever for the Federal government to use. This will be a fight more by NIMBYs and YIMBYs.
M&A in the resi space continues, as Figure, a blockchain finance company is acquiring Kiavi. “Figure is relentless in our pursuit of moving the capital markets onto blockchain rails, and nine months past our successful IPO, this Kiavi transaction is a further pole vault into tokenization, first-lien diversification and our agentic AI platform,” said Michael Tannenbaum, Figure CEO. “Adding Kiavi’s RTL and DSCR capabilities into our partner network will symbiotically supercharge their growth and the growth of our consumer loan marketplace.”
“For the past 13 years, Kiavi has been focused on powering our data flywheel and proving what’s possible when technology and industry expertise converge,” said Arvind Mohan, CEO of Kiavi. “This transaction represents a massive leap forward for the asset class. With Kiavi’s industry-leading platform powered by Figure’s innovative blockchain marketplace, we have the opportunity to deliver an entirely new – and unmatched – standard of reach, reliability, and execution.” Following the deal close, Mohan will join Figure’s executive team as Chief Business Officer.














