**NOW.** Wednesday's services-side inflation read finally produced the bond reaction Monday and Tuesday's hot data did not. The ISM Services Index headline at 54.5 beat consensus 53.7 modestly, but the load-bearing print was the Prices Paid sub-index at 71.3 — the highest reading since August 2022 and well above April's 65.1. The 10-year popped 4 basis points to 4.50% from 4.46%, and Bankrate's 30-year edged up to 6.57% from 6.55%. ADP private payrolls added a modest May beat at +122K versus +110K consensus — directionally consistent with strong-labor but not today's market driver. The Tuesday-brief argument that the bond-resilience to hot labor/manufacturing data was conditional on the inflation read confirming the thesis played out today: the inflation read came in hot, and the thesis got tested.
**NEXT.** Friday's NFP for May (consensus +135K, unemployment 4.2%) now carries a different asymmetric setup than yesterday's brief implied. The pre-Services-Prices framing was "cool NFP accelerates the rally; hot NFP at most stalls it" — that called the symmetric case backwards. With today's Services Prices print already moving bonds 4 basis points in the hot-data direction, the read for Friday becomes more genuinely two-sided: a cool NFP needs to confirm labor softening AND clear today's higher Services Prices base; a hot NFP confirms the inflation read carries into hiring data and the rally that opened the week unwinds materially. The Fed enters blackout Saturday 6/7 ahead of the June 17 FOMC, Warsh's first meeting as chair — markets will spend the weekend recalibrating positioning if Friday's print moves rates more than 5 basis points in either direction.
**RANGE.** Today's 30-year at 6.57% sits 2 basis points above Monday's open at 6.55% but still 14 basis points below the four-weeks-ago level at 6.71%, and the four-week trend remains the dominant marketing framing. But the lens worth using today is the refi-application-share read: MBA mortgage applications for the week ending 5/29 showed total applications down 2.5% week-over-week (purchase -3%, refi -2%), AND refinance applications up 20% versus the same week one year ago. The 20% YoY refi gain is meaningfully larger than analyst expectations and confirms what the four-week-trend math suggested — the rate environment has eased enough that the closed-book refi cohort is reactivating. For an LO with a meaningful past-client book closed in 2023 or early 2024 at 7.0%+ rates, that 20% YoY pickup is the underlying demand signal that justifies prospecting energy today rather than waiting for a "better" rate environment.
**DO.** The focus segment today bifurcates. For Bucket A (close-by-Friday borrowers): the lock-now case is now more urgent than Monday's framing implied; the 2 basis-point move on today's Services Prices read costs roughly $5 per month on a $400K loan and the Friday NFP setup carries real downside risk. For the closed-book refi cohort (closed at 7.0%+ in 2023 or 2024): the MBA's 20% YoY refi gain is the prospecting signal — borrowers in that cohort ARE responding to the eased rate environment industry-wide, but they may not be calling YOU. Do this today: split the next 90 minutes between (1) Bucket A urgency texts to in-flight borrowers with a "today's move makes the lock case stronger" message, and (2) a refi-cohort prospecting message to closed-at-7.0%+ past clients with the framing "for a $400K loan you closed at 7.25%, today's payment is roughly $180 a month less than what you are paying — want me to run your specific break-even math." The Bucket A move protects revenue you already have in the pipeline; the refi-cohort move adds revenue the eased environment is creating.