UWM Holdings Corp Q2 FY2024 Earnings Call
UWM Holdings Corp (UWMC)
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Auto-generated speakersLadies and gentlemen, good morning. My name is Abbie and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the UWM Holdings Corporation Second Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise, and after the speakers' remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. Thank you. And Blake Kolo, you may begin your conference.
Good morning. This is Blake Kolo, Chief Business Officer and Head of Investor Relations. Thank you for joining us and welcome to the second quarter 2024 UWM Holdings Corporation’s earnings call. Before we start, I would like to remind everyone that this conference call includes forward-looking statements. For more information about factors that may cause actual results to differ materially from forward-looking statements, please refer to our earnings release that we issued this morning. Our commentary today will also include non-GAAP financial measures. For information on our non-GAAP metrics and the reconciliations between the GAAP and non-GAAP metrics for the reported results, please refer to the earnings release issued earlier today as well as our filings with the SEC. I will now turn the call over to Mat Ishbia, Chairman and CEO of UWM Holdings Corporation and United Wholesale Mortgage.
Thanks Blake and thank you everyone for joining us today. For a while now, we've been saying 2024 would be a better year for the industry than 2023. And although it hasn't been that much better yet, our production at UWM has been winning. The market might be getting better soon, which we'll talk about a little bit later. But industry volume in the first half of 2024 versus 2023 is about the same. Most people are living in the purchase-driven market, but there's still tremendous upside that lies ahead. UWM has been winning. We had an amazing quarter, which we'll go through the details, but the market might be getting better here soon. While rates have stayed higher for longer, the broker channel continues to post share increases as the latest data shows the highest channel market share since 2008. So, we continue to see the data on mortgage loan officers migrating from retail to wholesale. We're excited about that upside and it's starting to happen. Now, there's tremendous buzz on our campus as many of you saw at UWM LIVE! And those that were here saw first and our continued focus and investment in technology, which put UWM in the broker community in a position to handle the significant increases in production that we anticipate when the Fed cuts rates multiple times over the next 12 to 15 months. Now, let's look at the second quarter performance. Whether we compare year-over-year or sequentially, the second quarter was a great quarter. We closed $33.6 billion in total production within our guidance with over $27 billion coming from purchase. Our production is up 6% from the second quarter of 2023 and more impressive, that’s up 22% compared to the first quarter this year. In fact, it was our highest quarterly production since the first quarter of 2022. Our gain margin was 106 basis points at the higher end of the guidance and we generated net income of over $76 million, and that includes a decline of $115 million on the fair value of MSRs, which is tied to interest rates and out of our control. In the second quarter, we announced a number of products and technology that add speed and capacity on the broker channel that really just didn't exist in 2020 and 2021. We're really excited to see these things come into action. First, Mortgage Matchup, our consumer-facing website, is now the official mortgage partner of the NBA and WNBA, and we're seeing more and more people going to this website every single day. Track Plus, which enables UWM to handle everything from the closing process from title, closing, disbursement, so the broker no longer has to go outside and work with a third-party title company or anyone outside, and it saves the consumer thousands of dollars many times. This is a huge game-changer and we're taking advantage of it right now and so are our brokers. We scaled PA Plus, which is processor assist plus a line brokers, and their processes to choose which part of the loan process they want UWM loan coordinator to handle. This immediately adds capacity for our brokerage, which will become more critical as rates come down. Finally, we continue to invest heavily in our bolt underwriting system. This allows brokers to get initial approval in as little as 15 minutes and also is allowing our underwriters to do more business every single day with technology pulling the weight on a lot of the underwriting processes. The full impact of these investments will be apparent when we enter a refi market where you will see UWM and the brokers able to add significantly more increase in volume than the rest of the market, while still maintaining speed and the service we are known for. To put it bluntly, UWM and the broker community are thriving and are ready for when rates drop and they will drop. You guys know me and know I'm excited about the business, and I'm excited as ever. But in my 21 years in this industry, I've never felt UWM more prepared for the opportunity we have right now. We are prepared, and we've been building for this opportunity, and we're super excited. Now, I'll turn things over to Andrew Hubacker, our CFO, and then I'll come back and chat later.
Thank you, Mat. We were pleased with our second quarter financial performance, reporting positive GAAP net income for the quarter and year-to-date. Importantly, we also remain profitable operationally and on an adjusted EBITDA basis before considering the net change in the fair value of MSRs, which is largely outside of our control. Total production volume of $61.3 billion year-to-date is an approximate 13% increase from the first 6 months of 2023 and gain margin of 107 basis points is up from 90 basis points in the same period last year. These increases in volume and gain margin have allowed us to continue to invest significantly in our people, our technology and in the growth of the broker channel while maintaining profitability. During the second quarter, we continued to execute on our consistent strategy of opportunistically selling MSRs, and we have generated close to $2.4 billion in net proceeds from bulk and excess sales through the end of the second quarter. Proceeds from these sales have been used to delever our balance sheet, increase production and invest in our business while also maintaining a consistent dividend for our shareholders. These sales have been targeted at our higher coupon MSRs and allowed us to significantly derisk the portfolio. Most of our bulk and excess sales in the first six months of 2024 were servicing rights on loans with coupons above 5.5%, and approximately one-third of our bulk sales were Ginnie Mae collateral. The weighted average coupon of our portfolio declined from the end of 2023 to 4.31% even with year-to-date new production at higher rates. As of the end of the quarter, our capital and leverage ratios continue to fall within expected and targeted ranges in the current environment. We ended Q2 with total cash of just under $700 million and no outstanding borrowings on our MSR or unsecured lines of credit. So liquidity and access to liquidity remain very strong. We continue to be prepared operationally and financially for different market cycles. Okay. I'll now turn things back over to our Chairman, President and CEO, Mat Ishbia, for some closing remarks.
Thanks, Andrew. I'll close with a few points before the Q&A. More and more American consumers are seeing the advantage of getting their mortgage through the broker channel. It's undeniably the fastest, easiest and most affordable way to get a mortgage and the latest share numbers validate this. As I said before, in Q1, we saw the broker channel achieve the highest share of industry in the last 15 years. I would say that UWM and the broker are in a much stronger position heading into the next refi market than we were in 2020. But regardless of the market, we'll remain the best mortgage lender in America. Our focus will continue to be on providing elite service and technology to the mortgage brokers so they continue to serve American consumers. Having been the number one wholesale lender for a decade now and number one overall lender for the last three years, as well as a top purchase lender in America, our focus turns to making the broker channel number one. To us, the broker channel achieving over 50% market share may take us three years, five years or 20 years. But this is the target and this is what we're going to focus on because it's best for the consumers, it's best for mortgage brokers, and it's also best for UWM. We're going to win as a team. Now turning to guidance. We expect Q3 production to be anywhere between $31 billion and $38 billion and our gain margin between 85 and 110 basis points. With that being said, the last couple of days of the market has really made an inflection point where we can look at, could the refi boom be here right now? Now if the 10-year stays where it's at right now, and mortgage interest rates stay with that right now, we will beat this guidance from a production perspective. But I'm more excited about the fourth quarter and beyond if the 10-year and rates stay where they're at. Obviously, rates could go back up five minutes after I talk on this call and could be exactly what I guided to you. I want to make sure you guys know 31 to 38 and 85 to 110 is in line, and we expect to be at those numbers, but there is a lot of upside ahead. The best part about the upside is this: we are the most prepared mortgage company in America. We've been building for this. We did not lay people off. We have been prepared for the opportunity. And I always said the mini-refi boom or a full refi boom, the first six months is when you make all the money. And that's what we're about to hit, we are in the best position ever at UWM, and I'm proud to share that with the shareholders and excited about the future. And if the market turns back, we're still going to dominate in the purchase market we have been for the last couple of years. So we're excited about what's ahead. We'll see what happens. I'm really excited to see the third quarter, fourth quarter and the upside and possibilities ahead with UWM. Now at this time, I'll turn it over to the Q&A, and we'll go through there.
And your first question comes from the line of Bose George with KBW. Your line is open.
Hey, good morning. In terms of rate expectations in the market, if the Fed does cut by a couple of hundred basis points as the forward curve suggests, but the yield curve steepens and say, the 10-year doesn't go down that much. Do you think we could see a pickup in ARM production and that help contribute to overall volume increases?
Yes. Thanks for the question. Obviously, it's hard to predict all the opportunities and possibilities out there. The Fed cutting rates as much as you just described would be a massive movement in the markets in general. I do have a hard time thinking the 10-year would not follow in some impactful way, but also understand the difference between how much the 10-year versus 30-year are fixed. So could ARMs become more relevant? Yes. I still believe the 30-year fixed will be the prevailing product for the foreseeable future. But the Fed cutting rates even 25 basis points, which everyone in the market expects September 17, 18, whatever, will move the markets from a perspective of consumer demand, consumer awareness. It's the best marketing piece in the world, right there when the Fed cuts rates, it will lead every news station and every consumer will call their mortgage broker, and we think that will be more impactful than even the rate movement down. So we'll see how that all shakes out and what the impact will be. But we're on the cusp. We're not quite there yet, but we're on the cusp of a potential very interesting time here that we are very well prepared for, and we've been waiting for here at UWM.
Okay. Great. Thanks. And then actually, on the TRAC+ program, how much do borrowers save from this? And then in terms of how you guys essentially work with title insurers to sort of reinsure that? Or how does that structure of that program work?
Yes. Well, there's a bunch of different nuances and parts to it. But the key is the consumer saves thousands of dollars on many transactions, if not all transactions through TRAC+. It's a really simple, easy way to close your loan. We're trying to make the process faster, easier and cheaper. It does all three. There are all different nuances with how we handle the risk. But from a perspective, we look at it as we're taking on little to no risk at all in our organization, and we're saving consumers a lot of money, and it's disrupting the title world, and it's going to happen because it's better for consumers. We're always focused on what's better for consumers, and that's why we're winning because brokers are better for consumers. It doesn't happen overnight, but it's all happening, and title is another example of that.
Okay. Great. Thank you.
Thank you.
And your next question comes from the line of Derek Summers with Jefferies. Your line is open.
Hi. Good morning, everyone. To follow on to kind of TRAC, TRAC+ and PA+. Could you provide any kind of incremental color on maybe adoption rates by your broker partners? Or any other color on how those products are trending?
Yes. Thanks for the question. So a couple of things. The adoption rates actually have gone up significantly in the last two to three months. What's happening is they're really just built for scale. There's two parts of the equation — back in 2020 and 2021, when refinances hit, brokers lost market share. They didn't gain as much because we were well-prepared, I would say, pretty well-prepared, not as good as we are today. But brokers were not. What we've built with PA+ and TRAC+ is we're taking the guesswork out of it. The brokers don't have to hire up. The title companies don't have to hire up. Nobody has to hire up because UWM's technology and innovation and that we've hired up in our preparation is able to handle the scale. Remember, it's not just UWM handling scale; brokers can't triple or double their business. How am I going to grow at a significant level if they can't? And so PA+, TRAC+ is basically taking the guesswork out of the game and saying, we've got the scale for everybody — brokers and UWM included. So the adoption has been pretty great, but it's not going to be at the levels that we expect because right now, they don't need scale because the market doesn't warrant it. So it's not creating — it's not a huge scale right now, but it does remove a lot of bottlenecks in the industry and brokers' world, and it makes it faster, easier and cheaper. And the word is scale. We're prepared for scale not only for UWM but for our brokers, and PA+ and TRAC+ does that.
Thank you. Helpful commentary there. And then just to circle back to your commentary on guidance. Is there a 30-year mortgage rate in mind where the floodgates really open on a refi rally or how are you thinking about that?
Yes. I mean I think it's — I don't know if I have an exact number to give you, but what I would say is the market where we're at now, if the 10-year ticks down a little bit more from where it is today, like the range we're in right now is good. But on the cusp, right? So I can't give an exact number, but I do think that if the 10-year drops down below the 3.75 range, and we start getting those ranges lower than that, it will spur a refinance boom. And so we're not there yet. And like I said, after I talk on this in 10 minutes, it could already have gone up a little bit today, that everything is exactly what I guided you to, 31 to 38. But there is a lot of upside. And what I'll tell you is we're the most prepared company for that upside. And if the rates drop more substantially and refinances become relevant, we could do a substantial amount of more business. And when I say substantial, I mean significantly more on a monthly basis, not for this quarter, most likely because this quarter is almost baked if you think about it, we're midway through August almost. But for the fourth quarter, it could be exorbitantly higher numbers with a rate drop a little bit further.
Great. Thank you. That’s all for me.
And your next question comes from the line of Doug Harter with UBS. Your line is open.
Thanks. Can you just talk a little bit more about some of the investments you made this quarter and how you think about the incremental scale and volume and how your expenses would look in a significantly up volume environment?
Yeah. Thanks for the question. So my expenses look very similar in a high volume environment — we built this in; like we didn't lay people off. We've been building, we've been preparing. I have about 8,000 people, I don't know the exact number, but roughly 8,000 people that are in the company right now. We are prepared. We've built some amazing technology, which I don't want to speak on this because you'll see it when you see it. But we have some amazing things that we've built and are ready for scale. And that's why I've been talking about how we are the most prepared. We've obviously dominated for the last 2.5 years; every quarter I come out and tell you what we're going to hit, and we hit it. We've been outperforming every other mortgage company in America, and it's not even close. We are the most prepared mortgage company, does not mean we're in the most volume of everyone when refinances come; there are a lot of refi-only shops out there. But we are extremely prepared. We are not going to miss a beat, like the amount of volume that we got in today or yesterday versus what we've been getting in before is significantly higher, and we can maintain that and manage that. And so I guess my perspective is technology, investment in people, in training, in all aspects of the technology innovation process has been significant. And it's not just been the last three months; we've been doing it for the last 2.5 years waiting for the day. And I'm not saying we're at the day, but we're getting close to that day. And when that day comes, which we all know is going to come, the best mortgage company in the country is going to thrive, and we're excited about that. And the brokers are going to thrive, and we're excited about that, and our shareholders will get that benefit.
Appreciate the answer, Mat. Thank you.
Thank you.
And your next question comes from the line of Brad Capuzzi with Piper Sandler. Your line is open.
Thank you for taking the question. Just following up on Track Plus, can you discuss a timeline or plan to extend this beyond online refi transactions?
Say that again?
On Track Plus, like I know you mentioned at UWM LIVE! that right now, it's the capabilities for it are just online refi transactions. Is there like a timeline or plan to extend that out beyond just refi transactions?
Yeah. So there's two parts — there's Track and Track Plus. Track allows for purchases, Track Plus is just refinance transactions right now. Once again, we can handle the purchase business, title companies can handle the purchase business, brokers have been able to handle purchase business. We all understand that market. What Tracks Plus, along with PA Plus, along with a lot of things are built for is the market doubling in a week's notice. So think about can the title companies handle double the volume; can a broker handle double the volume; can UWM handle double the volume? Well, the answer to UWM's question is yes, we can. The answer to a broker's question is yes, they can because of PA Plus. And the answer to the title company question is I have no idea. I don't really care because UWM can handle with Track Plus. So we're taking it into our own hands to handle double the volume on a one-day notice, right? And so Track Plus is built for that. And so it's online services for refinances, actual closings, it's making the process faster, easier, cheaper for consumers. I have not built, although I have the ability to build it. I'm focused on scale. And so we have not focused on, hey, can we advance it to in-person refinances or in-person purchases, although we tend to do some of that with Track, but my big focus is: what am I going to do if the 10-year or the rates drop overnight? And like I said, it almost happened Thursday, Friday; we're getting close and we're prepared for it, and that's what Track Plus is built for. And so — and the adoption, back to the earlier question, the adoption has been — I won't give a number, but substantially higher in the last three weeks or four weeks than it was two months ago because it's starting to — people are starting to feel what I've been pushing people is, are you an early adopter? You better try to stuff and understand how Track Plus and PA Plus work so when the rates do drop and that opportunity comes, can you double your business. You don't have to worry about it because UWM's got your back, and we will see that happen. So we're very well prepared, and we're excited about it.
Thanks. And then can you just give an update on the dynamics playing out within the broker channel? Have you seen pricing be more rational, and you're still seeing continued pullback from peers in that channel? Thanks.
Yes. I mean I think pricing has been rational for a while. I feel like I'm not concerned about wholesale. The truth is all parts of the market, if the rates drop a little bit further than they are today, right? Everyone is going to get busy. And then what happens in the rational pricing that maybe you're describing or pricing in general will change because people will start and a lot of our competitors bring in 75 to 100 loans a day, that's how small they are, right? We're much bigger than all them. Then going to 200 loans a day, can they double their business? I don't know if they can. And so what happens is they back off pricing. And so that will happen, but that's not just wholesale, that's retail. It's the whole industry. People that are not prepared, and that's why we want to be prepared so we don't have to do that. Our pricing, our margins, I feel really good about where our margins are. I feel really good about our volumes. We're very, very profitable as we stand today. Now the one thing to recognize when rates do drop and all these, you say rational pricing, but MSR values are going to plummet, right? So all this going to have huge MSRs. And hopefully, you realize Andrew, Blake, our team of people here did an amazing job with our MSRs. If anyone caught that our WACC is lower now than it was at the end of the first quarter after we just did $33 billion of rates around the 7% range. Imagine that, right? And so we've derisked significantly. So we'll still have an MSR write-down, but we'll have an origination write-up. If you think of it that way, we're doing a lot of business, and everyone is going to have an MSR write-down. So balancing those things, I understand what's happening is important going forward. But I think that it will be interesting to see people hand up. So pricing rationale, like margins will go up. They don't go down in a refi boom. They go up. How much they'll go up, hopefully, I can guide to next quarter if the rates drop a little bit further than they are right now. I feel good about our range because we're still off the lows, which was a couple of quarters ago, 75 to 100; we're 85 to 110, and we're going to be in that range this quarter. Now the question is if rates drop further, I expect margins to go up. And I'll guide to that for the next quarter if that happens.
Thanks for taking my questions.
Thank you.
And your next question comes from the line of Eric Hagen with BTIG. Your line is open.
Hello. Thanks. Good morning. Hope you guys are well? Following up on that point, I mean, how stable do you feel like margins are if rates are lower? Like even within the refi and purchase channel specifically, what do you feel like maybe accounts for differences in margins between those two channels if rates are lower?
Capacity. It's just capacity. That's what the constant difference is; people can't handle it. So, what's going to happen is if rates do go lower. Right now, we're at 85 to 110; it's all day — it's simple, easy, and clean. I feel really good about hitting those numbers, $31 billion to $38 billion. Now, if rates drop, like I said, let's just make up a number, I'm 3.50 on the 10 year, okay? If it goes there, all bets are off, right? It could literally — we could double our business, right? And if rates drop, margins could go from the 100 range to the 130 range, like it could go up to those numbers. I don't want you to quote those numbers. I'm just giving you ranges that if the 10-year goes down substantially, that's going to happen to everybody. Everyone is going to get — a lot to do with refinances because there are trillions of dollars of loans in the 7%, 6.5% to 8% ranges. And so all of a sudden, if the 30-year fix is 5.5%, 5.75%, bam, people are going to refinance. And when the Fed lowers rates, people are going to think about refinancing. They're going to start calling and reaching out and going to independent mortgage brokers. That's going to happen. And so MSR write-downs will be massive and origination volumes will increase, and so how does that balance out? You can determine how you want. Obviously, nobody controls the MSR write-ups and write-downs. We never take credit when it goes up; we don't want to take credit when it goes down. We want to focus on origination, and we're not that far away from those numbers. But once again, I'm not watching the market this morning. It could be already at four for all I know the 10-year, and we're at 3.80%, 3.90%. I don't know what it's at. But whatever it's at, you can't control it. So we just have to be the most prepared company. That's my job as the CEO and Chairman, and I think we're doing it.
We like it. Following up on the MSRs. I mean, any perspective on how you see the demand for MSRs developing with lower rates? Do you see the risk of lower MSR values impacting the demand side from the folks who typically show up to buy MSRs?
I don't know if I'll — so first off, we sold a lot opportunistically in understanding the market and are seeing where just the rates were. Do I see — for us, we don't buy MSRs; we originate them. We originate loans where there's nobody in the country that originates more loans than us, obviously, which originates more MSRs. So do I see a slowdown? I don't know if I'll see a slowdown in people buying MSRs because that's the only way they can originate. They have to actually have the servicing loan to have a chance. That's not how UWM is. We don't need the loan to have a chance. Our brokers get the loans because they're out there and best for the consumers. And so I'm not as concerned about will people not buy; people are going to still be buying. I'm not really in the mood to sell right now. We feel like we've derisked significantly, and we're all about origination. 1,000% of our focus is on origination, being prepared, helping brokers be prepared, and making sure we deliver to the shareholders we have been promising, and I think we've been doing that. So it will be interesting. I don't think it will be a massive shift, but a lot of those servicers buy beyond cash flows; they buy for a chance to refinance.
Yes, I appreciate you guys. Thank you so much.
And your next question comes from the line of Mark DeVries with Deutsche Bank. Your line is open.
Yes. Thanks. I was hoping to get a sense of what kind of improvements do you think you're making with the technology investments and your time to close? And kind of how durable that would be under significantly higher volumes and what that might mean for your potential to take even more share within the broker channel if we get a surge in volume?
Yes. So, turn times are huge yields; speed to close with all the technology — so I'll talk about my technology standpoint, stat all the world with sugar leads, all the things that go on, people need to close loans fast and you get a borrower bought in, close the loan fast and effectively. When rates do drop, you're going to see everyone's turn times back up a little bit fast in the country now, 13, 14, 15 days; we're the fastest in the country by a long shot. We will maintain that across the board or if we get a little bit worse, it works by a day; everyone else is 40, 45; they might go to might go to 50, 60 days to close loans. That's what happened before, and that's what will happen again. And so our gap will widen because of our technology and because of our service levels and because of our staffing levels. Now with that being said, the technology we've invested in, I'm going to hold some of that back to some of the things that we've done because some of the stuff we've done, I think is going to really wow a lot of people, and some really interesting means I'd rather not get into all the details as of yet because we're — it's not ready to be talked about. But we have built a lot of — we have 1,700 technology people at our company every day, working on technology for one focus: growing the broker channel, helping brokers win, UWM win, making things faster, easier for consumers. That's what we focus on all day. We don't have people in different countries and all around the country promoting. They're in our office, and we have one team, one focus and one goal in our all-in-one building. And so we're all focused on it. There's some great technology stuff. Some of it you've seen or heard about, PA Plus, Track Plus, bolt — a lot of these things. But then there's some you have not heard about, but we are really excited about it. But the biggest thing for you is to speed matters. Speed will matter for consumers, saving $100 and $150. And for brokers and originators, it matters. They lose loans, they trade loans, they compete with people for loans and closing loans fast matters, and we are the fastest in the country by a long shot.
Got it. Thank you.
And your next question comes from the line of Terry Ma with Barclays. Your line is open.
Thank you. Good morning. Just had a follow-up on the gain on sale margin. It's been pretty consistent the last two quarters above 100 basis points. So I guess the question is kind of what gets you to the low end and maybe going forward, what gets you comfortable kind of raising the low end of the guide?
Yes. Well, obviously, a lot of things move. So people think we did, I think, 108, 106 back-to-back quarters, which were pretty good numbers. But if I felt confident that we would never be in the 85 range, I would move that off the bottom. I won't say that it can never go back down. That's why I have the range between 85 and 110, there's a lot of movements with a lot of volatility in markets, which we've seen actually as we're all aware. That actually makes hedging and margins very, very tough to come by. MSR valuations go up and go down; that impacts the valuations on pricing on a day-to-day basis, hour-to-hour basis. And so I don't feel that it's like — if I felt more confident that, hey, it could never be 85, I would change the number. So 85 to 110 is the guidance. I feel good about that. Do we try to have bigger margins? Absolutely. Do I feel good about our margins? Absolutely. But there are still 50 days left in this quarter; there's a lot of movement that could happen. Rates could go up and down; volatility impacts; everything is tied to hedges; a lot of aspects. And so keeping that range is good. We feel good about 85 to 110. And then to the question about what will make me move off the bottom, I think if the rates drop a little bit further, I could see myself moving off that bottom next quarter. I think that if we see a steadiness again this quarter, and rates take a little bit more of a dip, I feel confident in our capacity ability that I can move that number the next quarter on the bottom up a level or two potentially, and we'll look at that. But not yet; it's not there. I still think 85 to 110 is the number. And like I said, I haven't looked at the market. It could be 85 to 110 in the next three quarters for all I know, based on what the market does. But I'm excited about moving off that number hopefully next quarter if the rates come down a little bit further.
Okay. Got it. That's helpful color. And then just on the MSR sales, you guys mentioned you would be opportunistic, but you also mentioned you've derisked meaningfully at this point. So I guess going forward, can you maybe just talk about your appetite to sell higher coupon loans just given the demand still there?
Yeah. We're opportunistic with everything with selling MSRs. We're not really focused on it; like we had a strategy coming in this year. The strategy was to derisk, was to sell MSRs in the first three to six months of the year and prepare for scale, technology operationally and it's playing out how we expected. And so I'm not saying we won't sell any more MSRs because people call us all the time to try to buy them. However, it's not a focus of mine right now; my focus is on origination, on scale and dominance in this industry right now, and that's what we're focused on right now. So will we sell more? Possibly, but it's not a focus of mine right now or our organization because we're focused on those other things.
Great. Thank you.
Thank you.
And your final question comes from the line of Ryan Shelley with Bank of America. Your line is open.
Hey, guys. Thanks for the question. I just had a quick one on expenses here. I noticed that direct loan production costs were up pretty significantly in the quarter. If you could just provide any color there and as well G&A. Just any color you could provide there and factors to consider looking forward, that would be great. Thanks.
Yeah. So there's a lot of nuances and a lot of different things. But I guess I'd say naturally when you do more production, you're going to have loan production expenses, right? We help cover credit reports; the credit costs are going up; a lot of different things have gone up. But I really don't focus on expenses that much because I focus on winning and focused on growing. And right now, it's a growth mode, not an expense — like you've even heard a lot of my competitors who have been playing the game of cutting expenses. I don't hear them talking about that anymore because the game changed. We're focused on winning, which is revenue, origination, gain on sale, more brokers growing, loan losses, converting the broker channel and being prepared for the refinance opportunity along with the purchase opportunity, which I haven't hit on much because all I'm talking about refinances when rates are not a little more, where people sell their houses, and purchases will pick up; inventory will pick up. It's going to be a big swing of opportunity. And so the expense gain will go up consistently with our volume. But it's like — it's tied to loan production, and it's not really relevant. Our G&A, like our overall expenses from team members, we're in a pretty good spot. We're still hiring, but we're not hiring extremely high numbers because we've got our team, we've got our technology; we've got our systems, and we feel really good about where we're at. So the focus right now is on growth, scale and being prepared, and we are. Liquidity is great, we've derisked on MSRs; expenses, yes, we'll watch them, but that's not the game right now. The game is winning, and we're going to focus on winning right now. Thank you.
Got it. Thanks.
Appreciate the question.
And that will wrap up our question-and-answer portion. I would like to turn the call back over to Mat Ishbia for closing remarks.
Well, thank you very much. Thanks for all the questions. Really appreciate the support and the great questions that were there today. If you have any other follow-up, of course, Blake Kolo is always available on our team, and we look forward to a great quarter and to talk to you next quarter. Have a good one.
Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's conference call, and you may now disconnect.