Mortgage Rates Climb Again — Loan Demand Drops 5%

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Mortgage rates pushed upward for the third straight week, hitting their highest point in a month and cooling demand from both homeowners and potential buyers. According to the Mortgage Bankers Association, total mortgage application volume fell 5.2% compared to the week prior—though demand still sits comfortably higher than it did one year ago.

Rates Rise, Demand Slips

The average 30‑year fixed mortgage rate for conforming loan balances ($806,500 or less) rose to 6.37%, up from 6.34% the previous week. Points remained at 0.62 for borrowers putting down 20%. While this increase may seem small, it marks the highest level in four weeks.

Refinance applications dropped 7% week‑over‑week, though they remain 125% higher than the same week last year—largely due to extremely low refi activity in 2024. Purchase applications slipped 2% but are still 26% stronger than a year ago, signaling that buyers remain cautiously engaged despite rate bumps.

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Homebuyers are stepping to the sidelines again, though FHA applications saw a slight uptick,” noted Joel Kan of the MBA.

Market Context: A Rudderless Bond Environment

Mortgage News Daily reports rates have been flat to start the week as bond markets continue drifting without clear direction. The government shutdown backlog has slowed data flow, creating more uncertainty.

“Bonds have been a rudderless ship,” wrote Matthew Graham of MND. “Stale jobless claims and weak ADP numbers provided little inspiration.”

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What This Means for Professionals

Loan officers, real estate agents, appraisers, and mortgage‑industry pros should prepare for a choppy winter season. Purchase activity is steady but sensitive, refi activity is rising from low levels, and rates could continue bouncing as economic uncertainty lingers.

Whether you’re advising buyers, structuring deals, or analyzing market movement, this rate spike is a reminder: today’s mortgage market rewards speed, clarity, and strong consumer guidance.

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