Mortgage rates ease to 6.37%, leaving housing market stuck
The 30-year mortgage rate slipped to 6.37%, but homebuyers still face high borrowing costs and a market stuck in a holding pattern.
Ben Carter is a staff writer at P&L, covering markets, dealmaking, and public companies. He previously worked in equity research, focusing on valuation, earnings, and IPOs.
The 30-year mortgage rate slipped to 6.37%, but homebuyers still face high borrowing costs and a market stuck in a holding pattern.
Reuters said Treasury yields jumped as investors weighed higher oil prices and inflation worries, raising borrowing costs across housing and credit.
President Donald Trump warned Tehran over any fees on vessels in the Strait of Hormuz as West Texas Intermediate climbed and traders questioned whether the ceasefire will hold.
WTI rose 0.6% to $98.43 as traders watched the Strait of Hormuz and Iran war risks.
Freddie Mac’s 30-year mortgage rate slipped to 6.37% after a five-week climb, but economists still see a fragile housing market.
Freddie Mac says the average 30-year mortgage rate dipped to 6.37%, but borrowing costs still pressure the spring housing market.
Sultan Al Jaber said passage through Hormuz depends on “permission, conditions and political leverage” from Iran as Brent climbed back above $99 a barrel.
February’s PCE inflation rose 0.4% on the month and 2.8% year over year, keeping the Fed under pressure as rate cuts move farther away.
Freddie Mac said the average 30-year mortgage rate fell to 6.37%, ending a five-week climb after the U.S.-Iran ceasefire eased inflation worries.
U.S. labor-force participation fell to 61.9% in March, its lowest since 1977 outside the pandemic, even as payrolls beat forecasts.
Sultan Al Jaber said the Strait of Hormuz was “not open” as Brent rose above $99 and US crude topped $102 briefly.
Bitcoin futures open interest hit 726,000 BTC as altcoins gained some traction, but leverage still drove much of the move.