While noting the upside to President Trump's new executive order to expand home lending among community financial institutions, the Mortgage Bankers Association's top executive added a note of caution, saying benefits won't appear immediately.
In a wide-ranging interview at Intercontinental Exchange's ICE Experience 2026 conference in Las Vegas on Tuesday, MBA President and CEO Bob Broeksmit noted
"The volume of work that's been assigned to the CFPB in this executive order is enormous. They're the agency that controls it all no matter what kind of lender you are," Broeksmit said in an on-stage conversation with ICE Mortgage Technology President Bob Hart.
He also added new policy changes ought to apply across all lender types, including independent mortgage banks. "A couple of these things in the executive order made it look like the changes were only going to apply to banks of a certain size," he continued, pointing out that any type of "dumb rule" remains dumb for all mortgage lenders.
"We're urging all of these changes to apply to everybody, or in other words, fix it for everyone. That will help banks, but we want all capital sources to benefit because we want all borrowers to benefit," Broeksmit continued.
Broeksmit's comments
Trump's order, though, would require the CFPB to update rules and supervisory policies in order for changes to take effect, necessitating a pivot from the agency downsizing that has marked the current administration. At the beginning of his second term, the president and senior leaders effectively gutted the bureau,
MBA's call for expanding CFPB's oversight capabilities today represents a marked departure from the trade group's sometimes frosty relationship with the bureau under President Biden, with mortgage leaders often accusing then-Director Rohit Chopra of regulatory overreach.
In the last two years, however, Broeksmit and MBA have also
What does the M&A wave spell for the industry?
Elsewhere during the conversation, Broeksmit discussed the wave of consolidation that has swept across the mortgage industry for much of this decade. In 2025 particularly, the mortgage industry saw several
"It's largely because this remains a relationship business," he said. "I think because of the relationships of the vast scale of this country that it'll stay that way."
Simultaneously acknowledging that some digital lenders will continue to nab their fair share of customers thanks to their capabilities to generate loan volumes quickly, Broeksmit expressed doubt that the future mortgage landscape could or should be dominated by just a few lenders
"When you manage to market share instead of managing the risks, bad things happen," he said.










