The industry is talking about their earnings: Fannie Mae had $3.7 billion of net income, Freddie Mac had net income of $3.6 billion. Regular and frequent information like this is critical to make informed decisions, whether you’re thinking about buying stock or buying a home. I recently received this note. “Rob, occasionally I am asked by my clients, and friends, if there is a ‘common way’ for the public to track real estate. Got anything up your sleeve?” Sure, and of course First American puts out some very usable information. There’s also Reventure. “Enter your city, zip, or state to track the 2026 housing market with analytics...” Borrowers are more informed than at any point in the industry’s history. That reality exposes a deeper truth: mortgage production is not just math, it is math plus human behavior, and the lenders who recognize that will operate differently. In a market where the next refinance wave may be more competitive and technology is simultaneously improving efficiency and expanding risk, success will belong to organizations that stop waiting for a rate-driven rescue and instead focus on operational discipline, borrower trust, and retention strategies that treat the customer relationship as the most valuable asset on the balance sheet. (Today’s podcast can be found here and this week’s ‘casts are sponsored by FirstClose, which provides fintech solutions to HELOC and mortgage lenders nationwide. Their home equity lending platform accelerates the home equity lending process, reducing application to closing times from 45 days to less than ten. Hear an interview with AnnieMac’s Joe Panebianco on helping borrowers compete like cash purchasers, how affordability pressures are shaping borrower demand and new lending strategies, how global risks ripple into mortgage markets, and what key signals could drive a meaningful market shift through the rest of 2026.)
Some Volatility Surrounding Headlines, But Not Much Change
Some Volatility Surrounding Headlines, But Not Much Change
Bonds began the day roughly flat before losing ground modestly into the 9am hour as markets mis-read headlines regarding new peace proposals submi…