The rate tape is quiet for a third straight session, so this isn't the week to lead your marketing with the headline number — the prior days already worked the refi-and-spread angle, and borrowers can smell a recycled message. The fresher story for your marketing is the ground shifting under your real-estate partners. Realtor.com's new report shows foreclosure inventory ticking up off historic lows, a Florida suit over a $475 Compass transaction fee is drawing copycat-litigation warnings across the post-settlement landscape, and the IDX and listing-access debate keeps agents genuinely unsettled about where their inventory shows up. When your referral partners are anxious, the lender who shows up calm and useful wins the next introduction.
Rates did ease a little — Freddie's survey sits at 6.43% and retail near 6.6%, down roughly five basis points on the month — and yes, your above-7% closings are 50 to 75 basis points in the money. Keep that as a background note, not this week's headline. The opportunity that's actually new is the distressed and as-is inventory starting to move, and most agents don't know which of those deals are financeable.
That's your tactical opening: build a one-page "financing distressed and as-is listings" cheat sheet — what an FHA 203(k) or renovation loan can wrap purchase-plus-repairs into, and which condition issues (the shared wells, failed repair checks, and appraisal flags that NRMLA is asking HUD to loosen right now) will kill a standard FHA appraisal before you waste anyone's time. Co-brand it with your top agent partners so it forwards with both your names on it. It positions you as the answer on exactly the listings inching onto the market, and it's a reason to be in an agent's inbox this week that has nothing to do with quoting a rate.
draft that one-page distressed-and-as-is financing cheat sheet and send it to your top five agent partners with a note offering to pre-underwrite renovation financing on any fixer or foreclosure their buyers are eyeing.