This month, millions around the world are marking the Chinese New Year. In Chinese tradition, the Lunar New Year is not just a celebration. It is a reset.
Homes are cleaned. Debts are settled. Intentions are clarified before the year begins.
It is a time to take stock of what has accumulated, clear what no longer serves, and align direction before momentum returns.
For the mortgage industry, that ritual feels especially relevant as 2026 begins to take shape. After several years defined by volatility, margin compression, and operational strain, it’s a turning point for lenders. The next phase will not reward those who simply move faster. It will reward those who move with clarity.
At STRATMOR, we view this moment as more than symbolic. We see the lenders best positioned for the coming cycle as those taking deliberate action now: aligning strategy, operating models, and investment priorities before volume returns. The Chinese New Year reminds us that forward progress is most powerful when it is guided, not rushed.
And history shows that volume alone does not fix structural weakness. In fact, growth often magnifies it.
In a market where borrower behavior, technology adoption, and competitive dynamics are all evolving rapidly, lenders must not only anticipate change but also engineer it. Using the symbolism of the Year of the Horse offers a useful lens for thinking about abundance in 2026. This is not abundance defined as unchecked growth or volume at any cost, but by sustainable profitability, operational strength, and long-term relevance.
In Chinese astrology, the Horse represents dynamic energy, stamina, and purposeful movement — not frenetic activity, but guided momentum and disciplined strength. A trained horse can travel long distances, carry heavy loads, and maintain speed over time, but only with proper care, guidance, and balance.
That distinction matters for mortgage lenders in 2026. Market conditions may finally allow for forward motion again, but not all organizations are equally prepared. Some are still weighed down by legacy cost structures, fragmented technology, or cultural fatigue. Others may be tempted to sprint at the first sign of opportunity without addressing foundational weaknesses.
The Year of the Horse suggests that success will favor lenders who pair ambition with discipline and who harness momentum responsibly rather than chasing it reflexively.
One enduring Chinese New Year tradition is the practice of cleaning the house before the new year begins. The ritual symbolizes removing clutter to make space for good fortune and clarity. For mortgage lenders, that exercise is strategic. Before chasing new growth in 2026, leaders should ask hard questions:
Abundance does not thrive in crowded systems. Excess handoffs, layered approvals, and fragmented systems drain energy, obscure accountability, and slow decision-making.
For mortgage leaders, clearing the path may require:
Moving through 2026 without addressing these issues will limit both speed and endurance.
A horse’s power is not in its gait alone, but in its direction.
Too often, lenders boost origination capacity without aligning pricing strategy, risk tolerance, operational throughput, and customer segments. The result is activity that feels productive but fails to generate lasting strategic gain.
Instead, lenders should:
Momentum in 2026 should look like guided acceleration, not unfocused hustle.
The horse embodies endurance — a trait rooted in conditioning and sustained care. In mortgage lending, endurance separates organizations that sustain performance from those that exhaust themselves when conditions shift.
True endurance is built across people, processes, and platforms.
High turnover and burnout continue to challenge the industry, especially as roles evolve and capacity pressures fluctuate. Resilience requires deliberate investment in:
Strong organizations distribute strategic thinking; they do not centralize it.
High-performing lenders distinguish themselves not by how many tools they deploy, but by how intentionally those tools operate within a defined, coherent operating model. Process excellence, in this context, is about designing work to move smoothly from application through closing with minimal rework, clear ownership, and consistent decision logic.
From STRATMOR’s perspective, several principles separate well-orchestrated lenders from the rest:
AI and automation adoption continue to rise, but STRATMOR’s data shows uneven results. Lenders that deploy AI as point solutions often see task-level efficiency gains, yet enterprise outcomes — cost, cycle time, and customer experience — remain largely unchanged.
The differentiator is integration. Platforms deliver value only when they are connected across the enterprise and aligned to strategy. In 2026, the focus should shift from experimentation to intentional design.
STRATMOR identifies several high-impact platform strategies:
Abundance in 2026 will not come from adding tools to outdated workflows. It will come from intentional orchestration by aligning people, processes, and platforms to move loans forward smoothly and at scale.
As momentum returns, discipline will separate mortgage leaders from followers. In STRATMOR’s work with lenders across the country, four priorities consistently distinguish successful organizations:
Across all four priorities, the theme is consistent: intentional design comes before lasting growth.
The Year of the Horse reminds us that energy without direction creates chaos, while direction without energy leads to stagnation. In 2026, mortgage lenders have an opportunity to combine both — channeling renewed momentum through disciplined strategy and aligned execution.
At STRATMOR, we work alongside lenders to evaluate operating models, benchmark performance, align people and technology investments, and translate strategic intent into measurable outcomes. The next cycle will reward preparedness. The time to build that readiness is now.
Running with purpose requires more than optimism about improving market conditions. It requires disciplined action starting today to ensure that when volume rebounds, your organization is built not just to move, but to sustain performance over the long haul.
Want to learn more about how STRATMOR helps lenders move with clarity and purpose? Contact us today. Nicole Yung
STRATMOR works with bank-owned, independent and credit union mortgage lenders, and their industry vendors, on strategies to solve complex challenges, streamline operations, improve profitability and accelerate growth. To discuss your mortgage business needs, please Contact Us.





