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Small brokerages struggle with CFPB cutbacks: ‘There’s no one to call anymore’


Peter Idziak (pictured top), a senior associate and mortgage attorney at Polunsky Beitel Green, said some of those states have even begun passing laws that would have been largely unnecessary with the CFPB still in place.

“I definitely think just in the industry as a whole, as we’ve seen the CFPB step back from both supervision and enforcement, that you’ve seen states step up, and that’s occurred in a couple of different ways,” Idziak told Mortgage Professional America. “One, you’ve seen more active state regulators and state AGs either enforcing existing state laws or federal consumer protection laws, because they are able to enforce a lot of those under Dodd-Frank.

“You’ve also seen states themselves start passing legislation in areas that maybe in the past, they were a little less interested in, because there was a feeling that you had a federal regulator that was enforcing a federal standard.”

Nobody to call

When federal regulators were enforcing a federal standard, if there were any questions at the state level, they would just pick up the phone and call the CFPB. Idziak said he’s heard that’s no longer an option.

“In the past, and I’ve heard this from more than one regulator, if they’re looking to a federal rule, like a CFPB rule, they’ll call up the CFPB and ask them how they interpret it,” Idziak said. “And one regulator told me, ‘It’s their role. I’m going to follow their interpretation.’ But if there’s no one to call anymore, this is where you get regulators, because the CFPB isn’t responding, now they feel they have more freedom. They’re creating or interpreting rules in their own way.”

How to Measure and Understand Your Market, Regardless of Location


This article is presented by Express Capital Financing

Before I bought my first property, I thought understanding a “market” meant understanding a city. If Phoenix was booming, I assumed the whole metro was booming. If Cleveland cash flowed, I figured anywhere within 20 minutes of downtown must be a good deal. And if Nashville was full of cranes and construction, then every submarket had to be a winner.

It took precisely one disappointing deal for me to realize how far off that thinking was.

Real estate does not behave like one big organism, moving in one direction at once. It doesn’t reward every neighborhood equally. And it absolutely does not care what city-level headlines say. Once you really start studying successful investors (or the lenders who fund them), you begin to see that the difference between a profitable deal and a painful one is often just a few streets, a school boundary, or a subtle shift in local demand.

What seasoned investors understand, and what most beginners miss, is that real estate is hyperlocal. Not just neighborhood-by-neighborhood, but often block-by-block. And once you see how local the game truly is, you finally understand why the same city can produce both incredible deals and terrible ones at the same time.

I’ve spoken with thousands of investors over the years and watched them learn this lesson in different ways. Some discover it when they find out their flip sat on the market 87 days while an identical house one mile over sold in a bidding war. Others learn it when a rental that looked great on a spreadsheet ends up in a pocket with high turnover and weak tenant wages. And still others figure it out the easy way, usually because a lender, like the team at Express Capital Financing, stepped in and explained what the numbers were really saying.

The pattern is always the same: Investors don’t fail because they chose the wrong strategy. They fail because they used the right approach in the wrong market.

Why Knowledge Is Power: Understanding Real Estate Markets

Years ago, I watched two investors buy similar single-family homes in the same metro, only six miles apart. Both were fixers, needed about $40,000 in work, and were purchased the same month.

Investor A bought in an emerging neighborhood where renovated homes were selling in under 10 days. Families were moving in, retail was expanding, crime was trending down, and local school ratings had improved for three consecutive years. Investor A’s flip sold above asking within 72 hours.

Investor B bought in a pocket that looked similar on paper, but the retail buyers weren’t actually moving into that specific corridor. It was wedged between two major roads, the schools were struggling, and renovated homes simply didn’t command much of a premium. The flip sat on the market for nearly three months—and eventually sold at a loss.

Same city, renovation, contractor, and timeline—entirely different outcomes.

That was the moment I stopped thinking about “cities” and started thinking about “micro-markets.”

The Personality of Your Market

Every area falls into one of three general personalities. Knowing which one you’re operating in determines everything: your financing, renovation style, hold period, exit strategy, and even your risk tolerance.

1. Appreciation markets

These are the high-growth areas fueled by corporate relocations, population booms, and steady economic expansion. Cities like Denver, Nashville, Austin, Raleigh, and Salt Lake City live in this category. Prices tend to climb faster than rents, inventory stays tight, and competition is fierce.

These markets reward patience and value-add projects. You don’t buy for cash flow here; you buy for equity, long-term appreciation, and the ability to force value through renovation. But you also have to be a disciplined underwriter, because mistakes get expensive fast.

2. Cash flow markets

These are the reliable, steady, cash-on-cash performers. Think the Midwest, Rust Belt, and many Southern metros. You can still buy under $150,000, cash flow from day one, and find motivated sellers and wide spreads.

These markets reward long-term buy-and-hold investors who understand tenant profiles, wage growth, and the real cost of maintaining older homes. Appreciation exists, but it’s typically slow and predictable rather than dramatic.

3. Hybrid markets

These are the sweet-spot cities where investors get both cash flow and appreciation: Tampa, Charlotte, Greenville, Oklahoma City, and parts of Phoenix. They aren’t as volatile as high-flying appreciation markets, but they still offer long-term upside and decent cash flow.

Hybrids are some of the best places to BRRRR because deals still exist, demand is steady, and rental growth continues year after year. Investors who understand construction costs and market ceilings do incredibly well here.

Learning to Read the Neighborhood

If you want to understand a market the way experienced lenders do, you have to stop looking at big data and start focusing on clues.

Days on market

Nothing communicates demand more clearly than DOM. A neighborhood where homes go under contract in two weeks behaves differently from one where houses sit for 90 days.

Renovated vs. unrenovated spread

In some pockets, you can buy an unrenovated house for $190,000 and sell a renovated one for $220,000. That’s barely enough spread to justify the work. 

In others, you can buy an outdated home at $160,000 and sell a renovated home at $280,000. That’s where serious flips happen.

Price-to-rent ratio

Strong rental corridors often fall below 16 on this ratio. Appreciation corridors typically sit above 20. Hybrid markets bounce in the middle.

School zones

A single school rating change can swing ARV by $50,000-$150,000. This is one of the most consistent patterns lenders see.

Crime concentration

Not crime citywide; crime within a three-street radius. Investors, ignore this at your own risk.

Local wages

Your spreadsheet does not determine your rent; it’s defined by what your tenants earn. If your ideal rent is 30% higher than what the median wage supports, the numbers will not play out the way you want.

What If Market Conditions Shift?

Real estate markets are fluid. Interest rates rise, population trends shift, inventory swings back and forth, and buyer psychology changes unexpectedly. 

Smart investors adapt, like so:

  • When interest rates rise: Buyer urgency drops, inventory builds, and negotiation power returns to the investor. BRRRR opportunities often expand here.
  • When inventory spikes: This is prime time for value-add investors. More choices mean better pricing and less competition.
  • When rents surge: Buy-and-hold deals become more attractive, even in pricier metros.
  • When prices flatten: Your renovation plan (and ability to improve a property without overbuilding) becomes your competitive advantage.

The Process That Simplifies Every Market

The most experienced investors follow a predictable pattern when evaluating a new market:

  • First, determine the market personality: cash flow, appreciation, or hybrid.
  • Then study how retail buyers behave: DOM, finished comps, and price ceilings tell the truth.
  • Then study renter behavior: actual wages, rent trends, vacancy, and local job stability.
  • Then look for distressed inventory and spreads that allow value creation.
  • Finally, choose the strategy that fits the neighborhood; not the strategy you prefer.

And remember, you’ll lose if you:

  • Force a flip strategy into a cash flow neighborhood
  • Try to BRRRR in an area with no spreads
  • Buy rentals where wages don’t support rent growth

But when the strategy and market align, you unlock the real power of real estate: repeatable, scalable, durable returns.

Why Your Lender May Know Your Market Better Than Anyone

Here’s something most new investors don’t realize: Your lender sees more deals than your agent, contractor, mentor, and spreadsheet combined. They see which ARVs hold, which collapse, which overpay, which deals fail inspection, which neighborhoods produce strong exits, and which consistently burn new investors.

Express Capital Financing works with these patterns daily. They know how to structure financing that reflects real neighborhood behavior, not theory. They know how to help an investor avoid paying too much for a flip, or borrowing too little for a BRRRR, or walking straight into a market mismatch they could’ve avoided.

I’ve heard countless stories where investors avoided massive losses simply because a lender pointed out a weak comp or an inflated ARV ceiling. Sometimes the deal that falls through is the one that saves you.

The Simple Truth

You don’t need to understand every market in America, follow national headlines, or chase trends across states. What you need is a deep understanding of the small piece of ground you’re investing in. Because when you understand your market at the neighborhood level, everything becomes clearer:

  • How much to offer
  • How much to renovate
  • How to finance
  • How to price
  • How to scale

Most investors fail not because real estate is risky, but because they never actually learned how to read the market.

Once you do, you’re playing a completely different game. And when you’re ready to fund the deal the right way, Express Capital Financing is prepared to help.

Capital One Travel: $200 Off Premium Vacation Rental (Targeted)


Capital One Travel: $200 Off Premium Vacation Rental

Some Capital One cardholders have an offer to save $200 on a vacation rental booking through Capital One Travel. These are Premier or Lifestyle Collection properties but there’s a very limited footprint. It also looks like many properties have a minimum of 2 nights, which makes this promotion less valuable.

Offer Details

Enjoy $200 off on any premium vacation rental booking. Offer automatically applied at checkout. Expires on December 31, 2025.

Important Terms

  • This offer will only be available until the earlier of (i) December 31, 2025, or (ii) while supplies last; and the offer is only available for the primary cardholder and there may only be one booking per account.
  • The discount will be provided as a one-time, single discount not exceeding $200. Once applied, the discount will not be available for other reservations, even if the qualifying reservation is modified or canceled.
  • This promotion cannot be retroactively applied to bookings made before the offer starts, and will not be applied to any bookings made after the offer expires. 

Guru’s Wrap-up

This can be a decent deal if you find an affordable property. Most likely you will need to book at least two nights, and that’s if you even find a property for your preferred destinations.

This is an example for The Stillwater House, a property in Hudson, Wisconsin. 

It has 4 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, and you can bring up to 7 people. It costs $690 for two days and you get a $200 discount and $50 experience credit. But this was by far one of the cheapest ones I saw, with many other properties costing at least double.

As I mentioned above, there aren’t many of these Premium Vacation Rentals, so it might be a challenge to find something that works for you, at a decent price.

Here Are My Top 10 Stocks for 2026


2026 is shaping up to be another excellent year for the stock market.

With 2025 nearly over, it’s a good time for investors to think about which companies they might want to add to their portfolios in 2026. A market pullback can happen at any time, so having a shopping list ready to go is a smart idea.

Here are my top 10 stock picks for 2026. I’m fairly confident that each of them will outperform the market next year.

Image source: Getty Images.

1. Nvidia

This is just a list of stocks — it’s not in ranked order. However, if it were in ranked order, there’s a good chance that Nvidia (NVDA +3.80%) would still be No. 1. The chipmaker has been the face of the artificial intelligence (AI) buildout since it began in 2023, and that trend shows no signs of stopping in 2026.

Nvidia Stock Quote

Today’s Change

(3.80%) $6.62

Current Price

$180.76

Hyperscalers are slated to spend record amounts on capital expenditures in 2026. Most of that money is going toward constructing data centers and filling them with computing equipment, such as Nvidia’s graphics processing units (GPUs).  Nvidia projects that by 2030, global data center capital expenditures will total $3 trillion to $4 trillion. If that forecast proves accurate, Nvidia will be a top stock to own in 2026 and several years beyond.

2. AMD

AMD (AMD +6.17%) has played second fiddle to Nvidia in the GPU market for many years, but it could start closing the gap. AMD’s offerings are far more competitive than they were just a few years ago, and management believes it can capture more of the market for the new AI workloads coming online.

The company projects that its data center revenue growth rate will rise to a 60% compound annual growth rate over the next five years. In Q3, its data center growth rate was 22%. If it can accelerate its growth to that 60% level, AMD will be a winning stock pick in 2026.

3. Broadcom

Chipmaker Broadcom (AVGO +3.18%) is taking a different approach to AI computing. Instead of offering general-purpose GPUs like AMD and Nvidia, it’s partnering with hyperscalers to design custom AI accelerators that are optimized to handle the needs of their workloads. These application-specific integrated circuits can provide better performance at lower costs, but at the cost of reduced flexibility. Many cloud giants are willing to make that trade, and Broadcom’s growth is accelerating as a result.

Broadcom Stock Quote

Today’s Change

(3.18%) $10.48

Current Price

$340.36

In the fourth quarter of its fiscal 2025 (which ended Nov. 2), Broadcom’s AI semiconductor revenue rose 74% year over year, and management expects that growth rate to accelerate to above 100% in its Q1 fiscal 2026.

4. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing

Nvidia, AMD, and Broadcom are all fabless chip companies: They design chips, but outsource the manufacturing of them to specialists like Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM +1.50%). It is by far the world’s largest chip foundry by revenue, and with its industry dominance, that likely won’t change anytime soon.

As long as high AI infrastructure spending continues, Taiwan Semiconductor will be a great investment, as it’s a neutral player in the AI realm. That spending is expected to rise again in 2026, boding well for Taiwan Semi.

5. Alphabet

Alphabet (GOOG +1.60%)(GOOGL +1.47%) is becoming a force to be reckoned with in the AI realm. Originally, its generative AI model, Gemini, was viewed as inferior to its rivals. But now, it’s seen as one of the leaders in the space.

Alphabet Stock Quote

Today’s Change

(1.47%) $4.45

Current Price

$306.91

Furthermore, Alphabet has a thriving base business (Google Search), as well as a strong cloud computing offering in Google Cloud. It’s hard to find a weak spot in Alphabet’s business right now.

6. Meta Platforms

Shares of Meta Platforms (META 0.85%) tumbled after it reported its Q3 results, with the market apparently reacting unfavorably to its high capital expenditure plans. However, that response ignores how strong the base business was in the quarter. Meta’s revenue rose by 26% year over year, thanks to the effects of AI on its platforms.

This growth will likely persist throughout 2026, and investors will come back around to Meta stock once they realize that all the other tech giants in its megacap cohort are spending just as heavily on AI as Meta is. The stock’s current discount is a great buying opportunity, and investors should take advantage.

7. Amazon

Amazon (AMZN +0.21%) stock has performed poorly in 2025: It’s only up about 3% so far this year. However, that wasn’t because Amazon’s business struggled. Its revenue rose at a 13% pace in Q3, led by its strong advertising division and cloud computing segment, Amazon Web Services.

Both of these businesses are expected to thrive in 2026. With each accounting for a significant chunk of Amazon’s profits, that bodes well for the stock’s chances of regaining its momentum.

8. PayPal

PayPal (PYPL +0.62%) stock has fallen by around 30% in 2025. However, it hasn’t been as bad a year for the payment processing giant’s business as that result would suggest.

PYPL EPS Diluted (Quarterly YoY Growth) Chart

PYPL EPS Diluted (Quarterly YoY Growth) data by YCharts. EPS = earnings per share. YoY = year over year.

PayPal delivered strong diluted earnings per share (EPS) growth in 2025, and that trend could continue in 2026, particularly if it continues its share buybacks. PayPal’s stock is dirt cheap at 11.5 times forward earnings, making it an attractive stock to buy.

9. The Trade Desk

The Trade Desk (TTD 0.17%) has had a disappointing year as well, with its stock falling by around 70% so far. When it switched to its AI-powered ad-buying platform, Kokai, its platform migration was poorly executed, leading to problems for its clients. This caused some clients to pull back on their spending with it, and it lost business to Amazon.

However, The Trade Desk is still in a great spot and is expected to grow revenue in 2026 at a 16% pace, according to Wall Street analysts. Combine that with its forward price-to-earnings ratio of 20, and you have a recipe for a stock that could outperform in 2026.

10. MercadoLibre

Last but not least is MercadoLibre (MELI +1.63%), a Latin American e-commerce and fintech giant that has posted year after year of successful quarters. The stock is up by around 20% for the year, but down by more than 20% from the high it hit in July.

MercadoLibre is the dominant e-commerce company in Latin America, and its growth is far from over. Previous pullbacks in MercadoLibre’s stock over the past few years have proven to be excellent buying opportunities, and the current one looks no different.

Fintech Mercury applies for banking license


Mercury Technologies said today it applied for a national bank charter and federal deposit insurance, a move that would allow the fintech to operate as a regulated bank and expand its product offerings under direct federal oversight.  The San Francisco-based Mercury said it submitted an application to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency for a […]



Google warns staff with US visas against international travel due to embassy delays, Business Insider says




Google warns staff with US visas against international travel due to embassy delays, Business Insider says

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⚠️ Disclaimer: This video is for educational purposes only and does not provide financial or investment advice.

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These 4 Banks Are Still Offering Close to 5% (But Not for Long)


David Prado Perucha / Shutterstock.com

If you’ve been enjoying the golden age of high-interest savings, consider this your final boarding call. The Federal Reserve concluded its final meeting of 2025 on Dec. 10 with another 0.25% rate cut, bringing the target range down to 3.5% to 3.75%. This marks the third cut of the year, and banks are already beginning to slash their own rates in response. While the Fed does not directly set…

This Week In College And Money News: December 19, 2025


Federal lawmakers and the Department of Education were active this week, advancing proposals that could reshape how students understand college costs, borrow for graduate programs, and access student loan forgiveness. From new financial aid disclosure bills to continued student loan processing delays, these developments carry real consequences for students and families planning for college or managing debt.

Here’s a quick look at the most important stories shaping higher education and student finances this week for December 19, 2025.

🎓 Headlines at a Glance

  • House Committee proposes standardized financial aid award letters
  • New proposal for a centralized net price calculator.
  • Lawmakers push back on Education Department limits affecting nursing students.
  • Student loan repayment backlogs remain high despite recent progress.
Capitol building in Washington. The United States Senate and House of Representatives. Source: The College Investor

1. College Financial Aid Clarity Act Introduced in the House

The College Financial Aid Clarity Act (H.R. 6502) was introduced in the House this week, aiming to improve how colleges communicate financial aid eligibility and expected costs to students before enrollment. The bill would require institutions to use a federally designed financial aid award letter – which would be a vast improvement of the myriad of financial aid award letters currently being used.

Supporters argue that current award letters often obscure true costs, making it harder for families to compare offers or understand borrowing needs. Here’s our guide on how to read a financial aid award, so you can see how confusing it can be.

➡️ Impact: Clearer financial aid award disclosures could reduce borrowing surprises and help families avoid committing to colleges they cannot realistically afford.

2. Student Financial Clarity Act of 2025 Targets Cost Transparency

A companion bill, the Student Financial Clarity Act of 2025 (H.R. 6498), would create a centralized universal federal net price calculator. Like existing net price calculators, it would show students their estimated total cost of attendance, net price after aid, and expected debt at graduation.

Lawmakers backing the bill say inconsistent formats and vague terminology have left students confused about what college will truly cost.

However, there are concerns about the massive amount of data required to be collected and how this would actually work in practice.

➡️ Impact: If enacted, families could more easily compare colleges on price and debt outcomes, rather than relying on sticker prices or confusing award letters.

3. Lawmakers Push Back on Education Department Loan Rules for Nurses

More than 100 members of Congress sent a bipartisan letter (PDF File) urging the Department of Education to reconsider draft guidelines that exclude graduate nursing programs from the list of “professional” degrees eligible for higher federal loan limits.

Under the department’s current approach, many advanced nursing students would face lower lifetime borrowing caps than students in law or medical programs. Lawmakers argue this could limit access to nursing education and worsen workforce shortages.

You can see the full breakdown on graduate vs. professional degrees.

➡️ Impact: Borrowing limits directly affect who can afford advanced nursing degrees, particularly students without family financial support.

4. Student Loan IDR Backlog Remains Near 800,000

A newly filed Student Loan Status Report shows that the backlog of income-driven repayment (IDR) applications remains near 800,000, despite some improvement following the federal shutdown. The report indicates ongoing delays for borrowers seeking IDR enrollment and PSLF buyback processing.

Many borrowers are still waiting months for decisions that affect monthly payments and forgiveness timelines.

➡️ Impact: Processing delays leave borrowers in limbo, facing incorrect payments or stalled progress toward forgiveness.

Related Reading:

Can President Trump Reverse Student Loan Forgiveness?
Parent PLUS Borrowers Face A June 30, 2026 Deadline
Court Deals Final Blow To End SAVE Student Loan Repayment Plan

Trump Says Mortgage Rates Will Be a Lot Lower in Early 2026


I already compiled and posted my annual list of 2026 mortgage rate predictions.

But one more mortgage rate prediction just dropped, and it’s a doozy.

Yes, I’m being mostly facetious, but I still have to report it and let you digest it as you will.

It came during President Trump’s speech last night, where he briefly touched upon housing affordability.

Namely that it has improved during his first year in office, slowly restoring the American Dream in the process.

Trump Drops His 2026 Mortgage Rate Forecast

During a speech at the White House Wednesday evening, President Trump brought up a lot of things.

But the only thing pertinent to this post was his brief remarks about the housing market and mortgage rates.

He said, “The yearly cost of a typical new mortgage increased by $15,000 under Democrat rule. In 11 months. We’ve already gotten that annual cost down by $3,000 and it’s coming down a lot lower.”

This in reference to the 30-year fixed averaging around 7.25% in January versus about 6.25% today.

Adding that, “Wait until you see, the numbers are going to be shocking.”

He did the usual comparison to mortgage rates under Joe Biden, where they eventually skyrocketed late in his term due to the end of the Fed’s massive MBS buying spree known as QE.

Of course, Joe was also in office when mortgage rates hit record lows in 2021.

Anyway, forgetting the past and their ongoing rivalry, the part that stood out was Trump saying mortgage rates are going to come down a lot more.

And not just eventually, but “early in the new year.”

The irony is that for the 30-year fixed to improve markedly anytime soon, we’ll need more bad economic data.

Likely driven by a worsening labor picture with a higher rate of unemployment and jobless claims.

In other words, careful what you wish for when you’re promising materially lower mortgage rates in a short amount of time, but conveying the message that the economy remains strong.

We could potentially see mortgage rates improve for other reasons though, such as continued improvement in inflation readings, or more MBS buying from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which would help with spreads.

The New Fed Chair Will Apparently Lower Interest Rates a Lot Too…

There’s also the thought of a new Fed chair being nominated, though that will happen later in the year when Powell’s term ends in May.

To that end, Trump said, “I’ll soon announce our next chairman of the Federal Reserve, someone who believes in lower interest rates by a lot.”

Most understand that the Fed doesn’t control mortgage rates, largely because they only focus on short-term overnight lending rates.

And mortgage rates are the exact opposite, very long rates such as the 30-year fixed mortgage.

However, there can be some correlation as Fed expectations can drive long rates, such as 10-year bond yields, lower.

But that only tends to happen if the underlying economic data warrants a drop in bond yields, typically because of cooler economic conditions.

So ultimately the Fed is simply reacting the news we already know and not the one actually pulling the strings.

If Trump has bigger plans, such as another round of QE that involves mortgage-backed securities (MBS, that’s a different story.

However, it seems very unlikely that’s the case so it’s best to ignore this stuff and continue to focus on the data.

I do give him a tiny little bit of credit for staying on message though and continuing to promise a glorious return to low mortgage rates, something he heavily campaigned on.

The good news is politics aside, the 30-year fixed is expected to dip into the 5s in 2026, even without direct intervention or a friendlier Fed.

Read on: How are mortgage rates determined?

Colin Robertson
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