What happened to mortgage rates this week?
The Freddie Mac 30-year fixed mortgage rate fell 5 basis points to 6.47% this week following a ceasefire agreement in Iran and a framework to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. The previous weeks have been filled with constant back-and-forths, showing progress toward a resolution, only to be followed by heightened military action. However, the latest rounds have proven more promising than previous periods of reprieve, as a tentative deal has now been drafted and signed by President Donald Trump.Â
The newly seated Fed Chairman Kevin Warsh joined a unanimous 12-0 vote this week to hold the federal funds rate unchanged in a range of 3.50% to 3.75%, where it has stood since December. However, the hold was the least surprising part of the meeting. Warsh used his first decision as chair to signal a broader regime change: The easing bias is gone, forward guidance has been shelved, and the committee’s statement was rewritten around a single, unhedged commitment to delivering price stability. Markets responded with a jump in the 10-year Treasury and rising odds of a rate hike before the year’s end. The logic of Warsh’s approach, earning credibility by following through rather than telegraphing, is sound and ultimately the path to lower long-term rates. But a market without clear guidance may demand a premium in the near term, which could keep mortgage rates from falling as quickly as the Iran ceasefire alone might suggest.
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What does this mean for the housing market?
For buyers, the spring market has shown more resilience than the rate environment might suggest. Contract signings climbed 3.8% in May as sellers adjusted prices to attract demand and buyers responded. Listing prices have now fallen year over year for seven consecutive months, and inventory remains above last year’s levels. A lasting resolution to the conflict would help bring mortgage rates down, boost consumer confidence, and inject housing market momentum heading into summer. However, the path will likely be rocky.




