The one thing that actually moved today is the rate sheet, and it moved the wrong way for borrowers: Bankrate's daily 30-year ticked up about eight hundredths to 6.61%, the firmest print in roughly two weeks and now sitting in the upper part of its recent range. It's a small move — a few dollars a month on a $400K loan, not a repricing event — but it's worth naming honestly, because over the past week and month the 30-year is still essentially flat (down four to five hundredths). The right framing for a borrower is "rates firmed slightly today and are holding in the low-6.6s," not "rates are falling." On the news front it's a genuinely quiet Tuesday: the week's biggest mortgage stories — the CFPB staffing ruling, record seller concessions, Greenspan's passing — all broke earlier and were covered in Monday's edition. Today is light, and that's the honest read.
A few things did break that are worth your attention. United Wholesale Mortgage and Two Harbors traded sharp emails ahead of the vote on the CrossCountry/CCM deal — a reminder that wholesale-channel consolidation is still very much live if you broker. And the National Association of Mortgage Brokers formally asked the FHFA for a 12-month delay on the new Fannie and Freddie condo project and property-insurance standards. If condos are a meaningful share of your pipeline, that request — and whether FHFA grants it — directly affects how many of your files clear agency eligibility this year. It's the single most actionable item on the board today.
On the rate read: today's firming came even as the 10-year has been holding in the mid-4.4s, so this is more a mortgage-pricing wobble than a Treasury selloff — Mortgage News Daily flagged an unusual session where bonds decoupled from oil and their usual cross-market cues for no obvious reason. The practical takeaway for in-flight locks is unchanged: we're mid-pack over 90 days (6.23% to 6.70%) and near the top of the past month's band, so there's no urgency to chase a lower number, but no cushion to float for sport either. Friday's PCE inflation print is the week's real swing factor — the one release with the weight to push the long end out of this range in either direction.
The buyer-leverage story from Monday is still the most useful thing in your pocket this week: with sellers handing out record concessions and prices softening in much of the country, a seller credit remains the cleanest path to a lower payment without waiting on rates. On the regulatory side, HUD opened a 30-day comment window on a paperwork notice tied to the Section 184/184A loan-guarantee program — narrow, but relevant if you originate for Native American borrowers — and the OCC posted its routine June enforcement actions, the usual bank-supervision housekeeping.
Things you may have missed this week: a California settlement is forcing MV Realty to void its homeowner contracts and release the associated liens — a consumer-protection outcome worth knowing if a client ever mentions one of those "right to list" agreements. HousingWire also ran a sharp piece on AI-powered follow-up showing that intent-based targeting and a local phone number measurably lift contact rates — a concrete tactic for your own lead flow. And a quick 72-hour recap if you've been heads-down: the CFPB keeps its supervision staffing for now (plan your compliance posture as business-as-usual), May seller concessions hit a record, and the generational housing-reform package in Congress is still inching toward a compromise.
pull the two or three condo files in your active pipeline and confirm where each stands against the current Fannie and Freddie project and insurance standards. With NAMB pushing for a delay, you want to know now which deals are clean and which are leaning on a rule that may or may not get pushed — not discover it at underwriting.