Mortgage Rates Pushed Higher… Then Hit Resistance

Midweek bond market volatility increased as rates rose due to geopolitical tensions and oil price fluctuations. The Fed maintained rates but showed internal division about inflation risks. The market is currently reactive, and upcoming job reports may significantly impact rates. A "K-shaped" market highlights differing buyer experiences amidst rate sensitivity.
Modern infographic showing a home at dusk with an upward-trending line chart labeled “10-Year Treasury Yield,” an oil barrel icon, and a world map highlighting the Middle East. Headline reads “Rates Jumped This Week, But Found a Ceiling,” with supporting notes on Fed policy, no jobs report, and elevated market volatility.
Rates moved higher fast midweek, then stabilized as oil and geopolitical headlines drove bond markets. The Fed held steady, but internal disagreement and persistent inflation keep pressure on rates. For now, volatility stays high and lock decisions still require a risk-first mindset.

Last week was quiet. This week was not.

Rates stayed calm through last Monday, then Tuesday and Wednesday did the heavy lifting. By Thursday and Friday, things stabilized slightly lower, but the damage was already done.

The key driver hasn’t changed: geopolitics, specifically the Iran situation and its impact on oil.

When oil moves, inflation expectations move. When inflation expectations move, bonds react. And when bonds react, mortgage rates follow.

That chain has been linked tightly.

Midweek, reports around stalled peace progress and potential disruption in the Strait of Hormuz pushed oil higher. Bonds sold off. Rates jumped.

By Friday, tone improved slightly around negotiations. Oil eased. Bonds stabilized. Rates found a ceiling.

Not a reversal. Just a pause. Let’s see how this week goes. This morning, it’s not too promising.


The Fed: No Move, But Not Exactly Comforting

The Fed held rates steady, as expected.

But the details matter more than the headline.

  • Multiple Fed members dissented
  • Some want to acknowledge upside risk to inflation
  • Others want flexibility if things weaken

Consensus? Nope, the room is split.

Markets read that as uncertainty, not relief.

And uncertainty keeps a floor under rates.

Add to that:

  • Inflation still labeled “elevated”
  • Markets pricing ~50% odds of a rate hike by 2027
  • Powell staying on the board adds continuity, but not clarity

Translation: the Fed is not in a hurry to help rates lower.

No Jobs Report Last Week (But That Matters)

Normally, the first Friday = jobs report.

Because of calendar timing, it hits next Friday instead.

That means:

  • This week lacked a major economic anchor
  • Next week has one of the biggest data points of the month

If jobs come in strong → upward pressure on rates
If jobs show weakness → potential relief

But right now, the market isn’t trading data. It’s trading headlines.

The Bigger Signal (Don’t Ignore This)

Here’s the part most people miss:

The Fed is holding steady but the bond market is pushing yields higher anyway.

Neither is always right in the short term. When they disagree, it’s worth paying attention.

Right now, the bond market is betting inflation sticks around longer than the Fed would prefer.

That’s worth tracking.

Local Lens (Bay Area Reality Check)

  • Buyer demand is still there, but more rate-sensitive
  • New construction is carrying more of the volume
  • Entry-level buyers are feeling the squeeze hardest
  • Move-up buyers still active, especially with equity

That “K-shaped” market is real right now. A “K-shaped” market is where one group feels/thinks things are improving, while the other group is having the exact opposite experience. One moving up and the other down.

Bottom Line

Rates didn’t just move this week. They tested a higher range.

We’re now sitting at a point where:

  • Things could get worse before they get better
  • Or improve quickly if oil backs off

This market is reactive not predictive.


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