Mortgage Rates Top 6% and Crimp Housing Demand as Iran War Inflation Hits Budgets
Updated
Updated · Denton Record Chronicle · May 19
Mortgage Rates Top 6% and Crimp Housing Demand as Iran War Inflation Hits Budgets
11 articles · Updated · Denton Record Chronicle · May 19
Mortgage rates have moved back above 6% and near 2026 highs, undercutting a housing rebound that had begun with stabilizing borrowing costs and more resale inventory.
Higher energy prices tied to the Iran war are feeding fresh inflation into household budgets, reducing buyers’ room to absorb monthly housing costs.
The pressure follows a sharp rate surge earlier Tuesday, when the average 30-year fixed loan hit 6.75%—up 33 basis points in 10 days and 46 basis points above April’s 6.29% low.
That jump was driven by a bond selloff that pushed 10-year Treasury yields to their highest in more than a year, signaling a tougher backdrop for housing if inflation stays elevated.
Beyond oil prices, what hidden economic signal could trigger a sudden drop in mortgage rates this year?
Refinancing saves hundreds monthly, but when do high closing costs turn it into a financial trap?
Can America's housing market ever be insulated from overseas oil conflicts?