This month, we’ll talk to mortgage leaders about where the market is headed and how products are evolving digitally to suit buyers’ needs now. We’ll also explore emerging alternative financing options that are changing the game for buyers and sellers.
Source: Inman News
March into Mortgage and Alternative Finance Month at Inman
More from alternative financingMore posts in alternative financing »
- How to help senior real estate clients right-size with confidence
- Stop freaking out about 50-year mortgages. They might save the housing market
- How the 50-year mortgage could kill agent profitability
- How to win more listings in a locked-in market environment
- Help clients get spring deals done with an assumable mortgage
More from ibuyersMore posts in ibuyers »
More from MortgageMore posts in Mortgage »
- Bayview merger positions Guild Mortgage for refinancing boom
- Rep. Eric Swalwell sues Pulte, FHFA, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
- Homebuyers came out in force last week, and rates are trending down
- Fannie and Freddie cleared to back loans of up to $832,750 in 2026
- Realtor who tipped Pulte to Schiff loans now a witness [EXCLUSIVE]
More from Mortgage & Alternative Financing MonthMore posts in Mortgage & Alternative Financing Month »
- Shrinking economy bolsters the case for a June Fed rate cut
- UWM expands its Rocket rivalry into mortgage loan servicing
- Mortgage rates ease as economic data flashes recession warning
- Regulators expected to remove lid on Wells Fargo’s growth soon
- $18.5M in fines imposed on former Wells Fargo execs prove elusive
More from mortgage lendersMore posts in mortgage lenders »
More from mortgage productsMore posts in mortgage products »
More from theme-month-212103More posts in theme-month-212103 »
- One week after LA launch, Knock blankets Southern California
- Rocket Companies stock soars, plummets amid Reddit-driven volatility
- Study: Women pay higher mortgage rates than men in all but one state
- New camera promises 3D home scans in 15 minutes
- The digital transaction is great — but mortgage tech still needs work
Be First to Comment