Mortgage market update

Mortgage Rates Climb Again as Markets Doubt a December Fed Cut

Mortgage rates are on the move once again — and unfortunately for homebuyers, the arrow is pointing upward. Average mortgage rates rose to 6.23% APR in the week ending November 20, according to Zillow data shared with NerdWallet. As financial markets grow increasingly skeptical that the Federal Reserve will announce another rate cut in December, borrowing costs are creeping back into uncomfortable territory.

A delayed September jobs report didn’t help, showing modest hiring and slightly higher unemployment — not enough clarity for investors hoping for policy easing. Mortgage rates tend to move ahead of the federal funds rate, reacting to expectations rather than announcements, which explains why home loan rates drifted up before the Fed’s December meeting even arrived.

Why Rates Are Rising Again

Despite hopes for a gentler economic landscape, inflation remains stubbornly above the Federal Reserve’s target. With hiring stabilizing and unemployment not flashing warning signs, the Fed appears more concerned with taming inflation than stimulating job growth. That combination makes another rate cut in December increasingly unlikely.

The housing market felt a brief sigh of relief in October when lower rates nudged sales and listings upward. But inventory remains far below pre‑pandemic levels, and prices continue hovering near record highs. Even if the Fed did reduce rates next month — a scenario experts now consider a long shot — any drop in mortgage costs would likely be too small to significantly ease affordability challenges.

Tap to Explore: What a December Fed Decision Means for Buyers

No rate cut: Mortgage rates may continue drifting upward through winter.
Small rate cut: Borrowing costs may ease slightly but remain historically elevated.
Larger (unlikely) cut: Would create temporary buyer momentum — but current inflation data doesn’t support it.

What Professionals Should Watch Next

For real estate agents, mortgage brokers, lenders, and investors, December’s upcoming Fed meeting (Dec. 9–10) will shape the early 2026 landscape. Market conditions are shifting fast, and professionals working with buyers should prepare clients for ongoing volatility.

If you’re working toward a real estate or mortgage career in Florida or across the U.S. — or you’re looking to expand your professional toolkit — Cameron Academy offers flexible, high‑quality licensing courses designed to keep you competitive even when markets become unpredictable.

To explore the full economic breakdown behind these rate movements, visit the original analysis from NerdWallet, whose reporting provides valuable insight for today’s professionals navigating a volatile housing economy.

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