Mortgage rates barely budged at the end of the week, with the average lender’s top-tier 30-year fixed rate holding at 6.32 percent and staying inside a 6.29 percent to 6.33 percent band for seven straight business days. Thursday’s brief jump in market volatility faded after war-related headlines were retracted and clarified, leaving most lenders unchanged.
In practice, the calm reflects a bond market that has been pinned by uncertainty over the next phase of the Iran war and what it could mean for oil prices and inflation. Mortgage News Daily said rates are now hovering near the lowest levels in more than a month, while the bond proxy that helps set mortgage pricing, UMBS 30-year 5.0, finished the week at 99.20 after a small daily gain.
That has already nudged some lenders to reprice higher when bonds weakened, a reminder that the market is still sensitive to any fresh geopolitical shock. For borrowers, the upside is that the week ended close to recent lows; for lenders, the downside is that even a modest bond selloff can force faster rate changes.
Next week’s test is the Fed announcement, though markets are pricing in a zero percent chance of either a cut or a hike. The bigger question is whether any easing in war risk translates into lower oil prices and cooler inflation, because that is what would give mortgage rates room to break out of the narrow range they have been trapped in all week.