Mortgage Rates Jump
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Fannie and Freddie were once private companies. As the subprime bubble inflated in the early 2000s, they lowered their underwriting standards to remain competitive. When the bubble burst in 2008, touching off the financial crisis, the two enterprises were rushed into government control.
Mortgage rates are inching back toward 7%, highlighting the ongoing strain on US home buyers. The average rate on a standard, 30-year fixed mortgage was 6.86% in the week ending May 22, the highest level since mid-February, according to data released Thursday from Freddie Mac.
The bond market is scheduled to close 3 hour earlier than normal today--a common practice surrounding federal holiday weekends. This means 3 fewer hours where trading volatility can have an impact on mortgage rate movement.
Early forecasts called for a gradual decline in mortgage rates (potentially reaching 6% by the end of 2025), but concerns over a potential recession and uncertain trade policies h
Experts fear that the move, though it could help the government's budget woes, could disrupt the fragile U.S. mortgage market.
If Australians could fix their mortgages “US style” for 30 years as some have suggested they should, we would be staring at decade-high home loan rates.
Any adverse reaction from this event may lead mortgage rates toward 7.25% or higher, which would be the year-to-date high in 2025.
Mortgage rates are up this week. The reason? A weaker market for U.S. Treasury bonds due to concerns about spending in President Donald Trump's
Mortgage rates ultimately managed to hold steady on Tuesday despite some underlying market volatility. Rates change day to day (and sometimes intraday) based on movement in the bond market, and there's been plenty of that.
The centerpiece of the U.S. bond market is the 10-year Treasury, and its yield has climbed to 4.54% from 4.43% at the end of last week and just 4.01% early last month. That's a notable move for the bond market, which measures things in hundredths of percentage points.