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The Pulse Jun 22

Court keeps CFPB staffed as buyer leverage builds

The D.C. Circuit upheld the injunction blocking the bureau's planned workforce cuts, while record May seller concessions and softening prices hand buyers the strongest hand in years — with the 30-year holding in the mid-6.5s.

Monday, June 22, 2026 30-yr 6.530%10-yr Treasury 4.490%

Monday opens with a moderate but substantive slate, and the standout is regulatory: the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a standing injunction that blocks the planned reduction of roughly two-thirds of the CFPB's workforce. The operational read for lenders and LOs is straightforward — don't plan around lighter federal oversight. The bureau's supervision and enforcement staffing stays in place for now, so compliance posture, exam cadence, and the cost of a TRID or fair-lending miss are unchanged. The litigation isn't over, but the near-term staffing question is settled in the direction of business-as-usual.

The other live thread today is the demand side of housing. Redfin reports 46% of sellers gave concessions to buyers in May — the highest May share on record — and the concentration tells the story: roughly three-quarters of Nashville sellers paid up to close a deal, while the Bay Area saw the fewest. Paired with HousingWire's read on softening prices, the picture is a market that has quietly tilted toward buyers in much of the country. For an LO, concessions are the more actionable number than the headline price: a seller-paid rate buydown or closing-cost credit is the lever that turns a "rates are still high" hesitation into a signed contract.

Yesterday's edition led on the housing-reform bill working through Congress and a mixed supply picture; nothing new broke on that thread over the weekend, so it stays a watch item rather than today's story. The connection worth drawing is that the affordability squeeze driving seller concessions is the same one that keeps the policy conversation alive — supply and price pressure are two readings of one problem, and your borrowers feel both.

On rates, the tape is calm. The 30-year is holding in the mid-6.5s — Bankrate's daily print is 6.53%, down about five hundredths over the past week and four over the past month, so the honest framing is "stable and drifting slightly lower," not a rally. The 10-year firmed modestly to around 4.49% mid-month even as mortgage rates eased, a bit of spread compression that's quietly friendly to pricing. The week-over-week move is small enough that it's worth a few dollars a month on a $400K loan, not a reason to chase — but the trend gives you cover to tell a fence-sitting borrower that pricing has improved, not worsened, since they last looked.

On the regulatory and industry side: former Fed chair Alan Greenspan died Monday at 100 — a marker more than a market event, but a reference point for any client conversation about the long arc of rate cycles. Freedom Mortgage filed suit against a former SVP it alleges built competing software while on the job, a reminder for shops on the IP and non-compete front. And in the Federal Register, FinCEN and the banking agencies issued a proposed customer-identification rule for permitted payment stablecoin issuers, while HUD opened a 60-day comment window on a noncitizen-assistance information collection — both early-stage proposals, neither immediate, but worth a tag if you serve those segments.

pull the Redfin concessions data into one outreach to your stalled buyer pipeline. The message isn't "rates dropped" — it's "sellers are paying to close right now, and a concession can fund a buydown that lowers your payment." That reframes the conversation from rate to leverage, which is exactly where the market has moved.

What this brief is built on

1
National Mortgage NewsJun 21

Appeals court sides with CFPB's union, blocks job cuts

The D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals halted the Trump administration's attempt to fire nearly two-thirds of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's workforce, upholding a March 2025 injunction.

2
HousingWire — Real EstateJun 22

What falling prices mean for your real estate business

The most important number in the report is not the price drop. It is the price reductions that never came.

3
Redfin Data CenterJun 22

46% of Home Sellers Gave Concessions to Buyers in May, the Highest Share on Record For That Month

Nearly half of U.S. home sellers gave concessions to buyers in May, the highest May share in our records Concessions were most common in Nashville, the nation’s strongest buyer’s market, where three-quarters of sellers handed out concessions to attract buyers. They were least common in the Bay Area and other markets…

4
HousingWire — MortgageJun 22

Former Fed chair Alan Greenspan dies at 100

Economist Alan Greenspan, the former long-time Federal Reserve chairman whose policies are tied to the 2008 housing crisis, died at his home on Monday due to complications of Parkinson’s disease. He was 100.

5
Mortgage Professional AmericaJun 22

Freedom Mortgage sues ex-SVP it says built rival software on the job

He called it a once-in-a-lifetime chance - his old employer calls it something else

6
Federal Register — HUD DocumentsJun 22

60-Day Notice of Proposed Information Collection: Restriction on Assistance to Noncitizens and Authorization To Release Information/Privacy Act

HUD is seeking approval from the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for the information collection described below. In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act, HUD is requesting comment from all interested parties on the proposed collection of information. The purpose of this notice is to allow for 60 days of…

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Federal Register — U.S. Treasury DocumentsJun 22

Permitted Payment Stablecoin Issuer Customer Identification Program

The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN), together with the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Board), the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), and the National Credit Union Administration (NCUA) are jointly issuing this proposed…