
Think of mortgage rates like the price of a bus ticket.
The bus company (the bond market) sets the ticket price based on how many people want a seat and where the bus is headed.
The Fed doesn’t set the bus ticket directly. It makes announcements that can make riders feel more or less confident about the trip.
When riders feel great about the economy, they crowd other buses (like stocks) and fewer buy the bond bus. Fewer riders = the bond bus raises ticket prices = mortgage rates go up.
When riders worry, more choose the bond bus. More riders = cheaper tickets = mortgage rates go down.
That’s it. Mortgage rates move because of investor feelings about the future, not because the Fed flips a switch.
The Fed cut its policy rate.
That cut was already expected. What mattered was what Chair Powell said next: a December cut isn’t a sure thing. Investors had been almost certain it was coming. Powell cooled that idea. Confidence changed → bonds sold off → rates rose.
A big $15 billion corporate bond sale showed up.
Alphabet announced a large bond deal. Big new bond supply is like adding a lot of extra seats to the bond bus at once. To fill those seats, prices fall and yields (and mortgage rates) rise.
Some economic reports came in stronger than expected.
ADP jobs and ISM Services weren’t terrible for bonds. Stronger data = economy looks a bit hotter = investors expect fewer/farther-out Fed cuts = rates drift higher.
Freddie Mac’s weekly survey confused the story.
You may have seen headlines saying “rates fell.” Freddie averages last Thu–Wed. The spike happened after midday Wednesday, so it missed their average. Daily pricing actually rose this week even if the weekly average looked lower.
Applications recently jumped—but from earlier lows.
When rates dipped earlier, refinances and purchases popped. That bump showed up in last week’s MBA report. After the Fed press conference, though, rates bounced back up, so momentum cooled a bit.
The average 30-year fixed is near the highest levels in ~2 months, but still closer to 2025’s lows than the highs we saw earlier this year.
Markets are in “wait and see” mode. Without normal government data (shutdown delays), each non-government report (like ADP, ISM) carries more weight.
Big picture: we just had a reset in expectations. Investors now see a December cut as possible, not promised.
Inflation data (CPI/PCE) and jobs reports: cooler numbers help rates; hotter numbers hurt.
Large corporate bond deals: more supply can nudge rates up temporarily.
Fed speeches: wording that hints at “fewer cuts” can push rates higher; “more cuts” can pull them lower.
Buyers
If you find the right home and payment today, don’t wait for a perfect headline. Markets can change in hours.
Ask about lock options and float-down features in case rates improve before closing.
Refinancers
If your current rate is well above today’s quotes, it’s worth a quick savings check.
Consider cost vs. breakeven (how many months until savings exceed costs).
Everyone
Expect ups and downs. Use pre-approval and a plan so you can act when windows open.
“Fed cut ≠ automatic lower mortgage rates.” Rates follow bond investor expectations about the future, not the Fed’s move that day.
“Why did rates pop?” Powell tempered hopes for a December cut; a $15B bond sale added supply; a couple of strong reports.
“Are we back to the worst levels?” No. We’re off the recent lows, but still far below this year’s peaks.
Have questions or want to talk through your options?
Just fill out the contact form on this page or give me a call—I’m here to help.
#mortgagerates
#average30yearfixed
#fedratecut
#powell
#corporatebonds
#bondmarket
#ism
#adp
#housingaffordability
#mortgagenews
Source: Mortgage News Daily
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