
Stocks are higher this morning as tech stocks rebound. Bonds and MBS are flat.
Building Permits rose 4.3% MOM in December according to the Census Bureau. This is down 2.2% on a YOY basis. Housing starts rose 6.2% on a MOM basis but fell 7.3% on a YOY to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.4 million units. Housing completions were flat on a YOY basis at 1.5 million.
Homebuilder sentiment decreased in February according to the NAHB Housing Market Index. “Builders reduced their expectations for future sales as buyers report affordability challenges, which is contributing to declining consumer confidence for the overall economy,” said NAHB Chairman Buddy Hughes, a home builder and developer from Lexington, N.C. “While the majority of builders continue to deploy buyer incentives, including price cuts, many prospective buyers remain on the sidelines. Although demand for new construction has weakened, remodeling demand has remained solid given a lack of household mobility.”
“Housing affordability remains an ongoing challenge at the start of 2026,” said NAHB Chief Economist Robert Dietz. “The solution for the housing market is the enactment of policies that will bend the construction cost curve and enable additional supply of attainable housing. On the positive side, easing inflation should continue to allow lower interest rates for mortgages and builder loans.”
It sounds like supply isn’t the problem these days, with the builders cutting prices and the supply of unsold new homes at the highest levels since 2008. Approximately 36% of builders cut prices and the average cut was 6%.
The Federal Reserve wants to encourage banks to originate more mortgages. Michelle Bowman spoke at the American Bankers Association conference and discussed the Fed’s concern that mortgage origination and servicing is being handled mainly by nonbanks. In 2008, about 60% of mortgage origination was coming from the banking system, and today it is around 35%.
The Fed believes that banks have an inherent advantage in mortgage servicing and recognizes that the regulators may have overshot in the risk weightings and capital requirements for servicing rights. Essentially the amount of capital that banks were required to hold for servicing rights made servicing a non-economic business for banks. If you were in the mortgage business in 2012 and 2013, you could buy servicing for a song as banks unloaded them.
The other measure that the Fed is considering is changing the way banks set aside capital for mortgages. Under the current situation a mortgage is a mortgage is a mortgage. The regulatory and capital requirements don’t distinguish between a 95% LTV loan and a 60% LTV loan. The Fed looks like they will introduce for comment some sort of formula to ease capital requirements.
Of course regulatory timelines are long and there are comment periods etc. The big question for the banks is whether holding mortgages originated in-house meets the opportunity cost test. Ultimately this should be good for borrowers, although we might see a tightening of margins as more competition enters the space.
Fed Governor Michael Barr said the Fed is on hold for the moment and doesn’t feel a need to keep cutting rates. “Based on current conditions and the data in hand, it will likely be appropriate to hold rates steady for some time as we assess incoming data, the evolving outlook, and the balance of risks,” Barr said in a speech given before a gathering of the New York Association for Business Economics in New York.
Mortgage applications rose 2.8% from a week ago according to the MBA. Refis rose 7% and purchases increased 3%. The Spring Selling season is upon us and we stand the cusp of a mini refi boom as mortgage rates work their way below 6%.
“Mortgage applications rose last week as the lowest rates in four weeks helped to revive some refinance activity. Treasury yields ended the week lower as weaker data on retail sales and home sales outweighed better-than-expected readings on the job market for January,” said Joel Kan, MBA’s vice president and deputy chief economist. “Mortgage rates moved lower with the 30-year fixed rate decreasing to 6.17%, and all other loan types in the survey also declined. Refinance applications increased across all loan types, marking the strongest week for refinancing since mid-January. There was a drop in purchase applications overall, although VA purchase applications bucked the trend and increased 4%.”
Tools for Mortgage Originators
Are you a mortgage originator with a bookkeeper, but no financial analyst? Are you doing without an annual budget because you don’t have the time / resources to develop one? Are you considering an acquisition, and want an in-depth analysis of the potential synergies and impact on the bottom line? Perhaps you have some projects that need to be done, but you can’t justify a full-time hire.
I am a consultant who has extensive experience in capital markets, secondary marketing, FP&A, budgeting, and servicing. If you think you might have a need, let’s set up a discovery call.


















