Last week, 266 originators switched companies and 1,823 individuals obtained their NMLS license. Notable originator movements last week include:
Figures are based on last 14 months’ production.
Top Gainers (non-Bank/CU):
Calculations based on last aggregate production of individual LO’s 14 months’ production. Excludes companies below $100M in 14mo LO production value after gains factored in.
Last week, we introduced the Agent Loyalty Index (ALI)—a new metric designed to measure how consistently a real estate agent works with the same mortgage lender versus distributing business across multiple lending partners.
The response raised an obvious follow-up question:
Does Realtor loyalty vary by state?
The answer is yes.
Real estate has always been a local business. Housing markets differ. Brokerage models differ. Competition differs. It stands to reason that mortgage lender relationships differ as well.
This week, we analyzed the Agent Loyalty Index by state to establish the first nationwide geographic benchmarks for Realtor loyalty.
What Is the Agent Loyalty Index?
The Agent Loyalty Index (ALI) measures how concentrated a real estate agent's mortgage lending relationships are.
It is scored on a 0–10 scale:
A higher ALI indicates more concentrated lender relationships. A lower ALI indicates business is spread across a broader group of lending partners.
Neither is inherently better. The Agent Loyalty Index simply measures how Realtor relationships are distributed.
Agent Loyalty Index Rankings by State
Below are the current average Agent Loyalty Index (ALI) scores across all 50 states and the District of Columbia.
|
Rank |
State |
Avg. Agent Loyalty Index |
|
1 |
Hawaii |
5.64 |
|
2 |
Nevada |
5.54 |
|
3 |
Utah |
5.49 |
|
4 |
Pennsylvania |
5.47 |
|
5 |
California |
5.39 |
|
6 |
Maryland |
5.39 |
|
7 |
Virginia |
5.38 |
|
8 |
Arizona |
5.35 |
|
9 |
Delaware |
5.30 |
|
10 |
Rhode Island |
5.28 |
|
11 |
Connecticut |
5.21 |
|
12 |
Idaho |
5.19 |
|
13 |
Florida |
5.16 |
|
14 |
Louisiana |
5.14 |
|
15 |
Colorado |
5.13 |
|
16 |
Georgia |
5.12 |
|
17 |
Kansas |
5.12 |
|
18 |
Missouri |
5.12 |
|
19 |
Washington |
5.12 |
|
20 |
New Mexico |
5.10 |
|
21 |
New Jersey |
5.09 |
|
22 |
Illinois |
5.08 |
|
23 |
Wyoming |
5.07 |
|
24 |
Alaska |
5.03 |
|
25 |
Massachusetts |
5.02 |
|
26 |
District of Columbia |
5.00 |
|
27 |
Oklahoma |
5.00 |
|
28 |
Minnesota |
4.98 |
|
29 |
Michigan |
4.96 |
|
30 |
Tennessee |
4.95 |
|
31 |
New York |
4.92 |
|
32 |
New Hampshire |
4.91 |
|
33 |
Oregon |
4.88 |
|
34 |
Texas |
4.88 |
|
35 |
Indiana |
4.83 |
|
36 |
Ohio |
4.82 |
|
37 |
South Dakota |
4.82 |
|
38 |
Maine |
4.79 |
|
39 |
Kentucky |
4.72 |
|
40 |
Mississippi |
4.72 |
|
41 |
Alabama |
4.67 |
|
42 |
Montana |
4.64 |
|
43 |
Vermont |
4.60 |
|
44 |
Arkansas |
4.53 |
|
45 |
North Carolina |
4.50 |
|
46 |
South Carolina |
4.46 |
|
47 |
Nebraska |
4.45 |
|
48 |
West Virginia |
4.35 |
|
49 |
Iowa |
4.32 |
|
50 |
Wisconsin |
4.24 |
|
51 |
North Dakota |
4.11 |
What the State Rankings Tell Us
The difference between Hawaii's average ALI of 5.64 and North Dakota's 4.11 is significant.
Markets with higher Agent Loyalty Index scores generally exhibit more concentrated mortgage lender relationships. Realtors in those markets are more likely to work consistently with a smaller group of preferred lending partners.
Markets with lower ALI scores tend to have more diversified lending relationships, where business is spread across a broader mix of lenders.
That doesn't mean one market is "better" than another.
It means the competitive dynamics are different.
A loan officer prospecting in a high-ALI market may need to displace well-established lending relationships. In a lower-ALI market, Realtors may already be accustomed to working with multiple lenders, creating a different type of opportunity.
The Agent Loyalty Index provides context that production alone cannot.
Why This Matters for Mortgage Sales
For mortgage executives, branch managers, and producing loan officers, understanding where Realtor relationships are concentrated can influence recruiting, market expansion, partnership strategy, and sales expectations.
The Agent Loyalty Index adds a new dimension to mortgage sales intelligence by helping quantify the relationship dynamics behind Realtor production.
Next Week: Even More Local
State-level benchmarks are only the beginning.
Real estate doesn't compete at the state level—it competes neighborhood by neighborhood and city by city.
Next week, we'll take the Agent Loyalty Index one step further by examining Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs) to identify where Realtor loyalty is strongest at the local market level.
Because understanding who produces business is valuable.
Understanding how Realtor relationships vary from one market to the next may be even more valuable.
When it comes to mortgage market intelligence, you have a handful of options, and RETR is one that truly stands out. Here’s what Christine Atkinson, Top Producer at Columbine Mortgage has to say about RETR: “RETR provides a great deal of insight and more. It is a key tool I rely on every day.”
But you don’t have to take their word for it. RETR offers a free trial to individuals and organizations to judge the quality of the data and insights for themselves.