How does the latest report compare to the prior quarter? Click through to find out.
Read More »Mortgage Market Off to Worst Start Since 2013
This is despite the Federal Reserve injecting $688 billion into the market in March to offset the impact of COVID-19.
Read More »Reduction of Mortgage Market Forecast for 2020
A possible rise in delinquency rates from Americans who lost their jobs due to COVID-19 could lead to a decline of nearly 1%. Click through to read more.
Read More »Risks Facing the Mortgage Market
Click through to read projections on the number of loans that could be in forbearance by the end of the month.
Read More »Are Prospective Homebuyers Still Optimistic?
A new survey looks at how consumers’ attitudes have changed since the outbreak of COVID-19—if they have changed at all.
Read More »Capital One Sells $17 Billion of Mortgages
In keeping with its intention to move out of the residential mortgage lending space, Capital One recently sold its first and second lien mortgages to a Credit Suisse subsidiary. Here’s how the funds from this transaction are likely to be used.
Read More »The Mortgage Market’s Best Kept Secret
There is one growing sector of the housing market that often flies under radar of industry attention: the rural housing market. But it's definitely making some noise now.
Read More »How Can Originators Flourish in an Evolving Mortgage Environment?
Russell Anderson, Guardian Mortgage President and CEO, explains how lenders must be swift to adapt and change their business strategies to fit the ever-changing housing market in order to reach and keep customers.
Read More »What’s Keeping Middle-Aged Borrowers Locked Out of Mortgage Market?
Mortgage originations among middle-aged borrowers, ages 40 to 60, have been on a fast-paced decline since 2004. See what two factors the New York Fed says are keeping them from getting a mortgage loan.
Read More »Over 1.5 Million ‘Boomerang Buyers’ Could Re-Enter Mortgage Market In Next Three Years
More than 1.5 million "boomerang buyers"–those negatively affected by the housing crisis–could re-enter the housing market at some point in the next three years, according to a study released by TransUnion on Wednesday.
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