(from Housingwire.com)
December is usually the slowest month in real estate. Low demand. Holidays. Everyone mentally on vacation. But post COVID, December has turned into an early preview of next year’s market. Think of it as the preseason scrimmage where the real trends quietly start.
The big thing to watch is mortgage rates. They are hovering near six percent because labor data softened and the Fed cut rates. If the ten year yield stays near four percent through December, we go into 2026 with cleaner runway than we have had in years. But all eyes are on the December Fed meeting, because even one hawkish comment from Jerome Powell can push yields up quickly.
Purchase applications also matter more now. When rates fall below roughly six point six four percent, weekly apps have improved. We have already had ten positive weekly prints since summer and more than forty straight weeks of year over year growth. If December keeps building momentum, it tells us demand is ready to pop in early 2026.
Inventory is another bright spot. For the first time in years, we are close to normal levels. Price growth is slowing. Buyers finally have options again. Sellers do not have the same leverage they had in the post COVID frenzy.
The takeaway. December might look sleepy, but the data inside it is loud. If mortgage rates hold near six percent and purchase apps keep pushing up week to week, 2026 starts on solid footing.
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A Mortgage Tech Vendor and a Major Lender Are Suing Each Other. Here Is Why It Matters
(from National Home Mortgage News)
Amerisave Mortgage and RingCentral are locked in a legal fight and both sides say the other failed to deliver. It is a classic mortgage tech showdown.
RingCentral says Amerisave stopped paying for its communication tools and breached their contract. Amerisave says RingCentral’s system never worked right, even after months of troubleshooting. One manager allegedly admitted the platform “couldn’t deliver the calls at a pace necessary to achieve Amerisave’s business objectives.”
The agreement dates back to 2021, which makes the timing of this lawsuit interesting. Amerisave was originating over thirty six billion that year. By 2024 it was closer to two point three billion. A lot has changed. A messy tech breakdown on top of a cooling market can be expensive for both sides.
The products in question include RingCentral’s internal communication suite and its contact center platform which was supposed to handle up to 1.3 million calls per day with thousands of active seats. RingCentral says they made extraordinary accommodations. Amerisave says the system never truly functioned.
Now they are in court, with RingCentral challenging whether Amerisave even filed its fraud claims within the legal time window. A separate consumer lawsuit is also in the mix about Do Not Call violations.
The bigger note for the industry is this. When loan volumes tighten, every tech dollar gets scrutinized. Partnerships that looked fine in boom years get stress tested fast. And when the systems that power your phones and customer interactions fail, the fallout gets very real.
Read more here
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