Updated
Updated · The Conversation · Jun 4
U.S. 30-Year Mortgage Rate Holds at 6.48% as Deficits and Inflation Fears Lift Yields
Updated
Updated · The Conversation · Jun 4

U.S. 30-Year Mortgage Rate Holds at 6.48% as Deficits and Inflation Fears Lift Yields

3 articles · Updated · The Conversation · Jun 4

Summary

  • Freddie Mac said the average 30-year U.S. mortgage rate was 6.48% on June 4, staying well above 6% and up sharply from roughly 6% in February.
  • Investor expectations—not the Fed’s policy rate—are driving borrowing costs, with lenders and mortgage-bond buyers demanding higher yields to offset inflation uncertainty, elevated oil prices and the Iran conflict.
  • Federal borrowing is adding pressure: the CBO estimates Trump’s 2025 tax and immigration law will add $3.4 trillion to deficits through 2034, increasing Treasury supply and pushing up benchmark yields that mortgages often track.
  • Mortgage-backed securities also carry prepayment risk, so investors demand an extra premium above 10-year Treasuries; that spread has remained elevated, keeping home-loan rates high even after Fed cuts in 2024 and 2025.
  • Current rates are painful for buyers and refinancers, but they are not historically extreme—30-year mortgages often ran between 6% and 8% in the 1990s and early 2000s.

Insights

As U.S. debt interest becomes the top expense, are homebuyers facing a permanently high-rate future?
With government borrowing surging, can the Fed's policies actually bring down mortgage rates for homebuyers?
The new Fed chief bets on AI to lower inflation. Can technology truly solve the housing affordability crisis?