Garg mentioned that the corporate’s fourth quarter is off to a considerable begin, with complete funded mortgage quantity anticipated to achieve a $500 million month-to-month run-rate “pushed by our new strategic partnerships,” he mentioned. Garg attributed the third-quarter beneficial properties to the corporate’s rising community of institutional companions and improvements in AI-powered mortgage origination.
“By the top of the subsequent six months, we count on to realize a month-to-month run fee of $1 billion in complete funded mortgage quantity,” he mentioned.
In the course of the firm’s Thursday morning earnings name, Garg informed buyers that it’s in discussions with further potential companions, together with one of many high U.S. dwelling enchancment lenders, two of the highest U.S. mortgage servicers, one of many high U.S. private lenders and a further mid-size financial institution.
Garg didn’t disclose the companions’ names, however mentioned that “the companion pipeline has actually, fairly frankly, exploded, and so we’re seeing plenty of demand.”
HELOC underwriting
Because of this, Higher onboarded two new partnerships and launched AI-driven HELOC underwriting for small companies and self-employed debtors, permitting for approvals primarily based solely on financial institution statements. The corporate additionally continued increasing its AI assistant, Betsy.
The digital mortgage lender posted a web lack of roughly $39 million, an enchancment from a $54 million loss in the identical quarter final yr and barely greater than the $36 million loss within the second quarter of 2025.
Higher’s funded mortgage quantity totaled about $1.2 billion, in contrast with $1.0 billion in Q3 2024 and flat from Q2 2025. Excluding loans from a discontinued partnership within the year-ago interval, funded mortgage quantity grew 56% yr over yr.
The corporate originated roughly 4,086 complete loans within the quarter, up from 3,443 year-over-year and 4,032 in Q2 2025.
By product sort, buy loans accounted for 64% of funded quantity at $774 million, whereas dwelling fairness merchandise, together with HELOCs and closed-end second lien loans, totaled $253 million, or 21%. Refinance loans made up the remaining 15%, or $183 million.
In the course of the name’s Q&A piece, Garg teased extra dwelling fairness launches down the street. At first of October, Higher launched its AI-driven wholesale dwelling fairness lending, utilizing its Tinman AI platform to boost entry to HELOC and CES loans.
Yr-over-year development was led by dwelling fairness merchandise, which rose 52%, and refinance loans, which grew 41%. Buy quantity elevated 5%.
Tinman AI Platform drives development
By channel, direct-to-consumer loans comprised 60% of funded quantity at $727 million, with Higher’s Tinman AI Platform accounting for the remaining 40%.
“Higher is enabling retail mortgage lenders to construct their enterprise on the Tinman platform…Now we have near-zero buyer acquisition value on this channel, and as companions fund loans on our platform, we earn a platform price and a share of earnings. We’ve grown this channel from 0% simply 9 months in the past to now, roughly 40% of our complete income,” Garg informed buyers through the name.
Higher’s Tinman platform served about 1,148 households and generated $483 million in funded mortgage quantity through the interval, Garg mentioned.
The corporate additionally confirmed in its earnings press launch that its chief monetary officer, Kevin Ryan, will retire efficient Nov. 14, 2025. HousingWire reported in October Ryan’s plans to retire and be part of PennyMac as a senior managing director, chief technique officer.
