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Solar for LOs; New Correspondent, Non-QM, Renovation Products; Freddie and Fannie News; Job Numbers Move Mortgage Rates

What’s our Federal Reserve concerned about? I was in a restaurant last night in Truckee, California, and was shown the table and handed the menu. When the waiter came back five minutes later, he said, “While you were deciding, we raised our prices.” Okay, a little inflation exaggeration humor there, but things are certainly always changing. Remember when everyone thought Amazon or Zillow were going to take over lending? Zillow is shuttering its closing and title services division. Something else that always changes is the population: 10,000 people a day turn 62, and many are eligible for a reverse mortgage, and so many lenders and LOs see reverse being a growth field. (Carol Ann Dujanovich, VP/Director of Reverse Mortgage Operations with University Bank, is featured on today’s 30 minute Rundown at 12PM PT on what’s made its Reverse Platform successful over the years.) (Today’s podcast can be found here and this week’s is sponsored by Gal

Third-Party, Down Payment, Outsourcing Products, Freddie and Fannie Updates for Appraisals

It isn’t as if building or lending products, or ways of doing business, were handed down by Trappist monks. Change is always afoot, for better or worse. What is old is new again. Teachers are moving to oral exams to counteract AI and ChatGPT, similar to ancient Greek and Roman times. In the West and Southwest, adequate water rights and supplies have always been contentious but have resurfaced (get it?) with news that may impact other cities and towns: Arizona began limiting approvals for new developments within the Phoenix area. It’s hard to build large affordable housing developments or swaths of housing in general if there is no water. Or road or sewage capacity. For fans of tiny homes, what is old is new again, and the Sears catalog kit houses (sold between 1908 and 1942) of old are back at Home Depot: Here’s 837 square feet for $43,000, 540 square feet for $44,000, and 444 square feet for $32k. (Today’s podcast can be found here and this week’s is

MSR Financing, Marketing, Appraisal, DPA Products; Fannie, Freddie Changes; EU Central Bank News

“I got stuck in a conversation with some wealthy people and one woman asked me how my investments were doing. I replied that both avocadoes should be ripe by tomorrow.” Food prices are an everyday reminder of inflation on the spending side of the equation, but on the flip side, plenty of people don’t know where to put their savings these days. One can pick up additional income on savings in places like the perfectly safe TreasuryDirect account and earn over 4 percent on as little as $100. (I would like to think that money won’t change me, but I won $5 on a scratch-off lottery ticket and used it buy name-brand aluminum foil.) The Fed has been, as usual, in the headlines this week by raising the target Fed Funds rate (what banks charge one another for overnight loans). Chris Whalen penned a piece titled, “FOMC Doubles Down on Market Risk.” One picture is worth a thousand words, and here’s a nice chart of Fed Funds to help keep things in pe

Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) Announces Updated AMI Limits

FHFA recently issued updated area median income (AMI) limits, which are used to determine whether borrowers meet the income eligibility requirements for Freddie Mac Home Possible and Refi Possible mortgages, as well as exemption from the Super Conforming Mortgage Credit Fee in Price. Get the full details, as you may be able to offer affordable mortgages to even more borrowers.

Productivity, Pre-Qual, Non-Agency Products; Freddie and Fannie Changes; Consumer Price Index: Painful

Start the day with a little something non-mortgage? Ira S. with U.S. Mortgage, on his time off, of course, found “River Runner.” One can basically click anywhere in the United States, and it will tell you, and your kids, where a raindrop will flow to the ocean. (No stories of you stopping at the Continental Divide with your drunk buddies, please!) This is cool technology, as opposed to ads that pop up on my computer from something I bought two years ago online. While on technology, here’s something else that anyone working with builders, or having a new home built, will find interesting: “Three Technologies that Buyers Will Expect from Home Builders in the Future.” Technology helped Zillow, which has never set foot in a house, determine that homes that have a front door that is either black or gray, can increase the home’s value by at least $6,271. (Today’s podcast is available here and is sponsored by Black Knight, providing innovative

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