Los Angeles—May 1, 2026, 05:09 PDT
PennyMac Financial Services Inc. is back under the microscope. Two shareholder-rights firms have launched individual probes into whether the mortgage lender misled investors ahead of its sharp January stock drop. The fresh notices arrived only days before the Westlake Village, California-based firm is set to announce first-quarter earnings.
Timing is key here. PennyMac plans to post March-quarter results after the bell on May 5—shareholders haven’t seen a routine update since the fourth-quarter numbers, which sent the stock tumbling 33.3% in a single session.
The Schall Law Firm is looking into potential securities-law breaches tied to PennyMac, zeroing in on whether the company misled investors or left out key information. The notice lists attorney Brian Schall as the point of contact for shareholders.
Rosen Law Firm flagged PennyMac’s Jan. 29 Form 8-K, highlighting the steep decline in servicing segment pretax income: $37.3 million, down from $157.4 million in the prior quarter and $87.3 million the year before. The firm also noted shares dropped $49.78, or 33.3%, closing at $99.92 the following session.
PennyMac reported fourth-quarter net income at $106.8 million, translating to $1.97 per diluted share, on total net revenue of $538.0 million. The company highlighted a 70% drop in pretax income excluding valuation-related items in servicing, citing a spike in the realization of mortgage servicing rights—those MSRs let firms collect on mortgage payments and fees—as borrowers prepaid loans more quickly amid falling mortgage rates.
Chairman and CEO David Spector called it a “solid fourth quarter” for PennyMac, wrapping up the year on that note. Still, he flagged “increased runoff on our MSR asset” as prepayment speeds picked up. For investors, that’s tricky: refinancing may give loan production a lift, but it also chips away at the projected cash flow from servicing. PennyMac Financial Services, Inc.
PennyMac shares remain down. Latest trade: $90.29, putting the company’s market cap around $4.86 billion, per late-Thursday market data.
The rout pulled non-bank mortgage lenders further into focus. PennyMac alone shed almost $2.6 billion in market value, Bloomberg noted back in January, after the company missed analyst earnings estimates. Mortgage News Daily picked up commentary from BTIG’s Eric Hagen, who said PennyMac hadn’t anticipated just how many paydowns would hit, adding that fierce industry competition is pressuring margins and limiting recapture.
PennyMac’s slide didn’t stop there—shares of Rocket Companies, UWM Holdings, and LoanDepot also took a hit, HousingWire noted, though the group managed to claw back some ground. Rocket CEO Varun Krishna, speaking with CNBC, chalked up the volatility to “different players having different business models,” per HousingWire. HousingWire
PennyMac is still one of the bigger names in U.S. mortgages. For 2025, the company reported $145 billion in new loan originations and ended the year servicing $734 billion worth of loans. That keeps it firmly in the ranks of the industry’s largest lenders and servicers.
Legal risk remains preliminary here. The notices outline probes and efforts to contact shareholders, but that doesn’t prove any misconduct yet. What happens next could hinge on PennyMac’s May 5 results—whether the servicing impact was just a single-quarter jolt from prepayments, or a sign of tougher, ongoing strain as mortgage competition intensifies.