The rate environment tightened meaningfully this week. The MBA reported mortgage applications fell 4.4% on a 30-year fixed rate hitting 6.45% — a notable jump from the 6.30% Freddie Mac recorded as of April 30, driven by the 10-year Treasury climbing to 4.45%, up 6 basis points from last Friday. The refi share held at 42%, which tells you there is still a refi pipeline — but at 6.45%, the math gets harder for most candidates, and the volume drop confirms that. loanDepot's Q1 results put a face on the broader margin pressure: net loss widened to $54.9 million on $286.4 million in revenue, with gain-on-sale margin continuing lower. The company is framing this as strategic patience ahead of a future high-demand cycle, but it is a candid read on what persistent rate volatility does to IMB economics.
The quiet story of the day is the Treasury Department's announcement that it will hold nominal note and bond auction sizes unchanged "for at least the next several quarters." More issuance supply drives yields higher — holding it flat removes one of the more mechanical upward pressures on the 10-year. Read alongside a VIX that dropped to 17.38 from 18.29 and jobless claims that fell sharply to 189,000, and you have a market in genuine tension: sticky inflation and geopolitical uncertainty pulling rates up, but easing volatility and stable government supply providing a counterweight. Fed Funds sits unchanged at 3.64%, and with consumer sentiment sliding to 53.3 from 56.6, the demand backdrop is softening — which should give the Fed cover to cut, eventually, but nothing on the table for the next several meetings.
At 6.45%, the pipeline math shifts. Borrowers who refied at 7.0% or above in 2023 still have a refinance story; everyone else is largely locked in place. For purchase, the new home market data deserves attention: March new home sales came in at 682,000 SAAR, up 7.4% from February's 635,000, and the median new home price fell 6.2% to $387,400 — the lowest since July 2021. Builders are cutting prices and buying down rates to move product. Housing starts jumped to 1,502,000 from 1,356,000, confirming builders are not pulling back despite margin pressure. That combination — more supply, lower prices, and rate buydowns — makes builder-referral relationships unusually productive right now compared to the resale side, where existing home sales slipped to 3.98 million SAAR.
Two structural notes for your files. First, Mizuho put out a blunt GSE conservatorship assessment: Fannie and Freddie investors face a realistic scenario of zero earnings access through 2033. The GSEs are financially healthy, but the political and legal path to privatization remains blocked — do not build a business case around a conservatorship exit changing the secondary market in the near term. Second, the CrossCountry Mortgage vs. UWM fight for Two Harbors Investment Corp. is worth following: CCM is touting its $1.4 billion Citi-backed all-cash offer against UWM's competing bid. The winner acquires a significant MSR and servicing platform, which shapes who controls future refi customer relationships at scale. Zillow and Realtor.com also announced a pre-market listings partnership that will syndicate Zillow Preview listings to Realtor.com starting this summer — a shift in where purchase buyers find inventory that LOs working the pre-market referral channel should watch.
reach out to one or two local builders you have or have had referral relationships with — with new home sales accelerating, median prices at a four-and-a-half year low, and builders actively buying down rates, a co-marketing conversation this week could surface two or three deals you would otherwise miss in a flat resale market.