Average 30‑Year U.S. Mortgage Rate Rises to 6.22%
Freddie Mac reports that the average U.S. 30‑year fixed mortgage rate climbed to 6.22% this week, the highest level in more than three months and up from 6.11% last week, reversing a brief dip below 6% seen earlier this month. The 15‑year fixed rate also ticked up to 5.54%, as the 10‑year Treasury yield rose to about 4.27% amid a war‑driven spike in oil prices and renewed inflation concerns. The article links the move to the Iran war’s impact on energy costs and to the Federal Reserve’s decision this week to hold rates steady while signaling it may delay any cuts, both of which are pushing long‑term borrowing costs higher. The jump threatens to further depress an already weak housing market, where existing‑home sales have been stuck near a 4‑million annual pace—far below the historical 5.2‑million norm—and new‑home sales plunged nearly 18% in January from the prior month. Early‑spring data show pending home sales rising modestly month‑over‑month but still below last year, suggesting the key spring buying season is starting under pressure from rising mortgage costs and broader economic uncertainty.
📌 Key Facts
- Average 30‑year fixed U.S. mortgage rate rose to 6.22% this week from 6.11% last week, the highest in more than three months.
- Average 15‑year fixed mortgage rate increased to 5.54% from 5.5%.
- The 10‑year Treasury yield is about 4.27%, up from 4.13% a week earlier, as rising oil prices stoke inflation expectations.
- Existing‑home sales have hovered near a 4‑million annual pace since 2023, well below the historical 5.2‑million norm, and new‑home sales fell nearly 18% in January from December.
- The rate increase follows the onset of the Iran war and the Fed’s latest decision to hold interest rates steady, which together have pushed long‑term borrowing costs higher.
📊 Relevant Data
In the fourth quarter of 2023, the U.S. homeownership rate was 73.8% for non-Hispanic White Americans, 63% for Asian Americans, 49% for Hispanic Americans, and 44% for Black Americans.
Homeownership Rates by Race and Ethnicity — Eye On Housing
Black and Latino households pay 13-18% more on average for energy per square foot of housing compared to White households.
Race, rates, and energy insecurity: exploring racial disparities in residential energy burden across the contiguous United States — Nature Scientific Reports
Latino households are nearly twice as likely as White households to experience high energy burdens.
PPI Finds Latino Families Bear Disproportionate Burden from High Energy Costs — Progressive Policy Institute
Factors contributing to racial homeownership gaps include demographic trends, affordability challenges, access to credit, homeowners' insurance costs, and fair housing discrimination.
Snapshot of Race and Home Buying in America — National Association of Realtors
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