Why Mortgage Rates Jumped Again and How Prepared Buyers Are Using the Volatility to Win
Why Mortgage Rates Jumped Again and How Prepared Buyers Are Using the Volatility to Win
What Is Actually Happening With Rates Right Now
If you watched mortgage rates dip in late April and felt cautiously optimistic only to see them climb back up you are not imagining things and you are not missing something obvious. The rate movement of the past several weeks reflects real and specific forces that are worth understanding clearly because that understanding changes how you should be approaching the buying process right now.
Why Rates Dipped and Then Climbed Back
Rates briefly moved lower in late April creating a window that brought a meaningful number of buyers back into active conversations. Then renewed tension around the Iran conflict pushed oil prices higher, inflation concerns returned, and rates moved back up.
As Geoff Ricker at Bay Capital Mortgage explains the connection between global events and your mortgage rate runs through the bond market. When uncertainty rises investors move money into bonds as a safe haven. When bond demand increases prices rise and yields fall which typically pulls mortgage rates lower. When the uncertainty resolves or when inflation concerns dominate investors move out of bonds, yields rise, and mortgage rates follow higher.
That cycle has been playing out repeatedly over the past several months and it is the direct cause of the rate volatility buyers are experiencing. The Iran situation has not resolved and oil prices remain sensitive to developments which means the volatility is likely to continue creating both windows of opportunity and periods of elevated rates.
Why Volatility Is Actually Creating Opportunity for Prepared Buyers
Here is the part of the current environment that most buyers are not seeing clearly. Rate volatility is not purely a negative development for buyers. It creates windows where rates dip to more favorable levels even within a generally elevated environment. Buyers who are positioned to act when those windows open are capturing rate locks that buyers who are not prepared simply cannot access.
The buyers winning in the current market share a common profile. Their pre-approval is already in place and fully reviewed. Their down payment is ready. And they have a loan officer who is watching rate movement daily and can alert them when a window opens worth locking into.
When rates dip even for a single day those buyers are ready to lock immediately. Buyers who are still in the preparation phase when the window opens watch it close before they can take advantage of it.
What You Should Be Doing Right Now
The practical guidance for buyers in the current environment comes down to three things.
Get fully prepared now so you can act when the next window opens rather than starting the preparation process when rates have already moved. A pre-approval that is complete and current eliminates the lag between a favorable rate appearing and being able to capture it.
Build a small cushion into your budget for rate safety. Evaluating your purchase at a rate slightly above what is currently quoted ensures the deal still works if rates move modestly higher before you lock. That buffer is not pessimism. It is the practical protection that keeps a transaction from falling apart because of a small rate movement.
Stay in close contact with your loan officer for daily updates on where rates are moving and why. In a volatile environment weekly check-ins are not frequent enough to catch the windows that open and close within days or even hours.
Geoff Ricker at Bay Capital Mortgage monitors rate movement daily and works with buyers to be positioned and ready when favorable windows appear. Reach out to Geoff Ricker to get fully prepared and stay ahead of the rate volatility that is defining the current market.
Sources
FederalReserve.gov MortgageNewsDaily.com EnergyInformationAdministration.gov TreasuryDirect.gov CNBC.com


