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The risk-free 2-year Treasury began 2022 yielding .73 and is now at 2.52 percent! Does your company offer 2-1 buydown loans? Do your LOs even know what a 2-1 buydown loan is? (If they don’t, bring them up to speed internally or through a program like XINNIX.) Things are changing. My gauge is very unofficial, but the number of emails saying, “Hey Rob, I am retiring but love your Commentary so can you change my email to…” is picking up. And I received this note from a mortgage vet. “Well, with the rates going up, looks like the mortgage industry is heading for another purge. We’ll start seeing the LOs that only had refi business slowly migrate away. Loss of ops staff still continuing. Like we haven’t heard this song before.” Lending aside, what do we make of these recent headlines? Investors place inflation bet on US farmland. Prices for prime Midwest ground climbed by up to a third in the past year as world food prices hit records. Rihanna is making her debut… on Forbes' coveted world's billionaires list. Dubai lures clutch of big crypto firms with tailored regulations: FTX and Binance set up operations in the Gulf state after securing approval under new licensing regime. Amazon inks deals to send its internet satellites into space: Arianespace, the ULA, and Jeff Bezos’s Blue Origin to provide backbone for high-speed networks. Uber adds planes and trains to automobiles in renewed “superapp” push: Ride-booking app aims to become a broader travel hub. Dang there’s lot going on! (Today’s audio version of the commentary is available here and this week’s is sponsored by Optimal Blue, a division of Black Knight. Today’s offers a tag-team discussion with Brennan O’Connell and John Dumonsau on how lenders are using data to create more accurate secondary marketing models.)
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IMAGE: The herringbone pattern seen in cross-bedded carbonate sands in the Bouse Formation, University of Oregon researchers conclude, is the result of the classic back-and-forth movement of water unique to ocean... view more
Credit: Photo by Rebecca Dorsey
EUGENE, Ore. -- Dec. 17, 2020 -- A team led by University of Oregon geologist Rebecca Dorsey has published two papers that provide new insights into the origins of the Colorado River, using data from ancient sedimentary deposits located east of the San Andreas fault near the Salton Sea in Southern California.
The papers, led by former master's student Brennan O'Connell and doctoral candidate Kevin Gardner, respectively, present evidence that the now desert landscape of the river's lower valley was submerged roughly 5 million to 6 million years ago under shallow seas with strong, fluctuating tidal currents that flowed back and forth along the trajectory of the present-day river.
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