Much Calmer Week (Relatively) With Much Lower Rates

Mortgage rates remain much higher than they were at the end of February, but they did not move higher this week. Here’s a breakdown of what happened in the markets and what to watch going forward.

Rate Survey Clarification

Weekly surveys from the Mortgage Bankers Association and Freddie Mac reported sharply higher rates on Wednesday and Thursday, but these measurements lag current market conditions by several business days. The MBA averages the trailing five business days and publishes three days after that window closes, while Freddie publishes the next day. This creates a timing gap where much can change before publication.

Rate Movement Analysis

Mortgage rates peaked on March 27th at an index value of 6.64, then declined approximately 0.23% by week’s end. To put that in perspective: rates held inside a 0.23% range for the entire year up until March 11th.

The daily rate index updates in real-time and captures mid-day changes from multiple lenders, providing a more current snapshot than trailing surveys.

Market Drivers

Two primary factors influenced bond and mortgage rate behavior:

  1. Inflation expectations: Bonds decline (rates rise) when inflation expectations increase
  2. Economic weakness concerns: Bonds improve when economic slowdowns loom, offsetting inflation-driven rate increases

Oil Price Nuance

Markets distinguish between spot (immediate) oil prices and future-contract oil prices. This week, bonds responded more significantly to December oil futures prices than to current spot prices. This explains seemingly counterintuitive rate movements despite volatile oil headlines.

Geopolitical Events Timeline

  • Wednesday night: Trump’s speech about potential Iran war escalation triggered rate and oil price spikes
  • Thursday: News of Iran-Oman negotiations regarding Strait of Hormuz access supported rate recovery
  • Friday: Stronger-than-expected employment data further supported bond markets

Economic Outlook

Inflation data will likely carry increasing importance in coming months as fuel price increases translate into broader consumer goods pricing. The March Consumer Price Index is scheduled for release, though most analysts anticipate oil-driven inflation will take time to appear in official measurements.

The current environment represents much calmer conditions compared to recent weeks, offering cautious hope, though the ultimate path of rates will depend on how geopolitical issues and the economy evolve.

Average Mortgage Rates

Mortgage News Daily

ProductRateChangePoints
30-Year Fixed6.43%-0.02
15-Year Fixed6.01%-0.01
30-Year FHA5.91%0.00
30-Year Jumbo6.60%0.00
7/6 SOFR ARM6.09%+0.04
30-Year VA5.92%-0.01

Mortgage Bankers Association

ProductRateChangePoints
30-Year Fixed6.57%-0.310.65
15-Year Fixed5.89%-0.220.75
30-Year FHA6.25%-0.340.81
30-Year Jumbo6.59%-0.290.43
7/6 SOFR ARM5.67%-0.490.56

Freddie Mac

ProductRateChangePoints
30-Year Fixed6.46%+0.250.00
15-Year Fixed5.77%+0.300.00

Recent Economic Data

Tuesday, March 31

  • January FHFA Home Prices (y/y): 1.6% (Forecast: 1.8%, Prior: N/A)
  • January Case-Shiller Home Prices (y/y): 1.2% (Forecast: 1.3%, Prior: 1.4%)
  • February JOLTS Job Openings: 6.882M (Forecast: 6.92M, Prior: 6.946M)
  • March Consumer Confidence: 91.8% (Forecast: 88%, Prior: 91.2%)

Wednesday, April 1

  • March ADP Jobs: 62K (Forecast: 40K, Prior: 63K)
  • February Retail Sales: +0.6% (Forecast: 0.5%, Prior: -0.2%)
  • February Retail Sales Control Group MoM: 0.5% (Forecast: 0.3%, Prior: 0.3%)
  • March ISM Manufacturing PMI: 52.7 (Forecast: 52.5, Prior: 52.4)
  • March ISM Manufacturing Prices Paid: 78.3 (Forecast: 73, Prior: 70.5)

Thursday, April 2

  • March 28 Jobless Claims: 202K (Forecast: 212K, Prior: 210K)

Friday, April 3

  • March Unemployment Rate: 4.3% (Forecast: 4.4%, Prior: 4.4%)
  • March Non-Farm Payrolls: 178K (Forecast: 60K, Prior: -92K)

Upcoming Economic Data

  • Tuesday, April 7: February Durable Goods: -0.5% (Prior: 0%)
  • Wednesday, April 8: FOMC Minutes (scheduled release)
  • Thursday, April 9: April 4 Jobless Claims: 209K (Prior: 202K); February PCE Prices (m/m): 0.4% (Prior: 0.3%); February Core PCE (y/y): 3.0% (Prior: 3.1%); Q4 GDP: 0.7% (Prior: 4.4%)
  • Friday, April 10: March Core CPI (y/y): 2.7% (Prior: 2.5%); March Core CPI (m/m): 0.3% (Prior: 0.2%); April Consumer Sentiment: 52 (Prior: 53.3)

MBS and Treasury Pricing

SecurityPrice/YieldChange
UMBS 5.098.83+0.17
UMBS 5.5100.65+0.13
10-Year Treasury4.338%-0.03
30-Year Treasury4.894%-0.34

Pricing as of 4/6 1:31 PM EST

Recent Housing Data

MetricValueChange
Mortgage Applications278.3-10.43%
Builder Confidence38+5.56%
Existing Home Sales4.09M+1.74%
New Home Sales587K-21.21%
Pending Home Sales70.9-1.25%

Source: US Housing Market Weekly — Jay Bridges, Mortgage Lender, Priority Capital Corporation