Mortgage

HousingWire’s mortgage news coverage spans the market and includes the coverage you need, from what your competition is doing to how they’re performing and what their future plans may be to the expert and analyst forecasts for how this unusual housing market will pan out in 2023 and beyond. 

And, given the current state of the housing market, which is unlike anything we’ve ever seen, it may be more important than ever to have a pulse on the latest industry news so you can pivot when new information indicates that you should. The HousingWire mortgage news coverage can equip you with the latest information you need in order to make the most informed decisions possible. If you want the latest in leading news to be delivered to your inbox on a daily basis, sign up here.

The latest mortgage news

December 2022 — The entire economic landscape, including mortgage rates, has changed recently, starting with the Fed’s talking points in early December. The honey badger labor market is still going strong, as we got another solid jobs report, which pushed bond yields higher at first. However, the way the day ended showed that change is coming.

As housing market analyst Logan Mohtashami wrote for HousingWire, “We now have a better idea of what the Federal Reserve wants to do with their Fed rate hikes, and we have a lot of data that shows that the economy will look different 12 months from now. This will be important to think about going into 2023, especially if the labor market does what the Federal Reserve wants it to do, which is slow down enough to create a job loss recession.”

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Generic AI won’t fix mortgage lending. Intelligent AI will. 

May 05, 2026By

Mortgage lenders are rushing to adopt AI, but many are repeating a familiar mistake: using new technology to accelerate old processes. Faster paper-pushing isn’t transformation. AI presents an opportunity to go further—but only if lenders approach it correctly.
In mortgage lending, intelligent AI means removing the paper, moving beyond simple automation, orienting technology around measurable business outcomes, grounding it in industry standards and disciplined data, and embedding it within a connected ecosystem rather than a patchwork of point solutions. The lenders who get this right won’t just be more efficient, they’ll define how mortgage lending works for the next decade.

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