Why Mortgage Rates Are Higher Than They Should Be Right Now and What Buyers Should Do About It
Why Mortgage Rates Are Higher Than They Should Be Right Now and What Buyers Should Do About It
A Rate Environment That Does Not Match the Economic Data
The average 30-year mortgage rate is sitting just under six and a half percent. On the surface that number might not seem surprising given where rates have been over the past couple of years. But here is what makes the current situation worth paying close attention to. Based on the underlying economic data rates should actually be lower than they are right now.
The labor market has been showing meaningful weakness. Under normal circumstances a softening jobs picture would give the Federal Reserve room to consider rate cuts and the bond market would price in that possibility, pushing mortgage rates lower. That is the connection that historically has operated between labor market data and the rate environment that borrowers experience.
But the historical connection is being overridden right now by something that has nothing to do with domestic economic conditions.
What the Conflict With Iran Is Doing to Rates
The ongoing conflict with Iran has pushed oil prices higher and the inflationary effect of more expensive oil is working its way through the entire economy. When oil prices rise the cost of transporting goods, manufacturing products, and delivering services all increase. That broad-based cost pressure shows up in inflation readings and inflation is precisely what keeps the Federal Reserve from cutting rates and what keeps mortgage rates elevated regardless of what the domestic labor market is signaling.
The uncertainty layered on top of the direct inflationary pressure compounds the problem. Bond markets do not like uncertainty. When the duration and outcome of a geopolitical conflict are genuinely unclear investors price in a risk premium that keeps yields and mortgage rates higher than the underlying economic fundamentals would otherwise justify.
As Brandon Evans explains the frustrating reality for buyers right now is that the rate they are seeing is being driven in meaningful part by factors that have nothing to do with their financial profile, the property they are purchasing, or the domestic economy they are operating in. The rate is where it is because of what is happening thousands of miles away and the timeline for resolution is genuinely unknown.
What Nobody Knows Yet
Recent statements suggest the conflict could resolve within weeks. That timeline may prove accurate or it may not. The honest answer is that nobody knows how long the current situation will persist, how much further oil prices might move in either direction, or how quickly any resolution would translate into improved inflation expectations and lower mortgage rates.
That uncertainty is precisely the point. The rate environment right now is being shaped by a variable that is inherently unpredictable and the range of outcomes from here is genuinely wide. Rates could ease if the conflict resolves quickly and oil prices retreat. They could move higher if the situation escalates or drags on longer than expected. Either outcome is plausible and neither can be predicted with the kind of confidence that would make waiting for a better rate a sound strategy.
Why Locking In Now Is the Right Move
Given the uncertainty driving the current rate environment Brandon Evans is advising every client he is currently working with to lock their interest rate as soon as possible rather than waiting for potential improvement that may or may not materialize.
The logic is straightforward. If the conflict resolves quickly and rates improve a refinance opportunity may emerge down the road. That would be a welcome development and a manageable one. But if rates move higher from here because the conflict escalates or inflation pressures persist a buyer who waited to lock will be paying more every month for the life of their loan. The downside of waiting in an uncertain environment is larger and more permanent than the cost of locking now and potentially refinancing later if conditions improve.
Locking in rate protection is a way of removing the uncertainty from the one variable in the transaction that is currently being driven by factors entirely outside any buyer's control. It converts an unpredictable situation into a known and manageable number that allows the rest of the transaction to proceed with clarity.
Get Clear on Your Numbers Before Conditions Change Again
The rate environment can shift quickly in response to developments that are impossible to anticipate in advance. The buyers who are best positioned when those shifts occur are the ones who are already in process with a current pre-approval and a clear understanding of what payment works for their situation.
Brandon Evans works with buyers to lock in rate protection at the right moment and navigate the current market environment with clarity rather than uncertainty. Reach out to Brandon Evans with any questions about mortgage rates, the current market, or what your options look like right now.
Sources
FederalReserve.gov CNBC.com MortgageNewsDaily.com EnergyInformationAdministration.gov BankRate.com



