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Market Monitor: Locks Move South in June; Credit Availability Tightens

Black Knight [1] has released it latest iteration of the Originations Market Monitor report [2], which looks at mortgage origination data covering June 2023 by leveraging raw lock data from Black Knight’s Optimal Blue PPE [3] platform. 

"As May gave way to June, we saw banks lose some of their appetite for jumbo loans," said Andy Walden, VP of Enterprise Research and Strategy at Black Knight. "While the OBMMI 30-year conforming index rose 6 basis points over the month, the jumbo rate index was up by three times that level. Purchase loans continue to claim a larger share of a shrinking origination pipeline, as refinance opportunities remain scarce. Indeed, we saw the purchase lending share of June's locks hit another all-time high. But keep in mind: It is a dominant share of a very constrained market." 

Overall, pipeline data showed rate lock activity fell across the board, lowering by 1% on a month-to-month basis. Purchase locks dropped by 0.6%, cash-out refinances dropped 1.4%, and rate/term refinance locks dropped by 17%. Purchase locks accounted for 88.4% of locks in June, the highest share on record. Even so, purchase lock counts were down 31% year over year and 29% compared with pre-pandemic levels in 2019. 

[4]

"As we noted in our most recent Mortgage Monitor report, the housing market has been reheating as we approach the traditional tail end of the homebuying season," Walden said. "What's clear is that continued economic uncertainty, tightening credit and affordability concerns have all helped to skew the market toward higher-credit borrowers. In fact, the average credit score among purchase locks hit a record high in June. Likewise, the average purchase price rising for the seventh straight month, while the average loan amount remained flat, suggests lower loan-to-value ratios as well." 

Other notable data, as highlighted by Black Knight includes: 

To read the full report, including more data, charts, and methodology, click here [2].