Depends what Latos we have. Latos that was one of the best pitchers in baseball not to long ago won't deviate to far back to the mean if he is back to the pitcher that was putting up ERAs near 3 for 5 years in a row won't come to far back.
In comparing 2016 Matt Latos and 2010 Matt Latos (arguably his best year), we may as well be talking about different pitchers entirely. In his prime, Latos had a fastball that sat pretty firmly in the mid 90s, and used a wipeout slider nearly 27% of the time.
2016 Latos has an average fastball a tic above 90, while reducing his slider % to roughly 13% - and for good reason - it's been getting crushed for a while. Here's a chart of his pitch values over the course of his career:
Long story short, he's getting by right now with two pitches that have been far below average for some time now. So how far back is the hypothetical mean? Pretty far. I'll also mention the disparity between his FIP and ERA, which suggests he's been incredibly lucky so far in 2016.
Albers - whom I freaking love - is on a hot streak. He's 33 years old and enjoying by far the best stretch of his career, albeit over the court of roughly 40 innings. Temper expectations with the fact that prior to last year, he never had a WAR above .8. This isn't a young kid with knockout stuff just now proving himself. One could possibly attribute the life left in his arm to the fact he hasn't had a serious season-long workload since 2013. (10 IP in 2014).
Then again, if you believe in the mythological powers of Don Cooper, you can throw all the advanced stats out the window. Maybe its #TWTW