Today is quiet where it usually counts — no GSE bulletins, no CFPB action, no fresh mortgagee letters, and a light corporate calendar. The day's real movement is in the bond market, and it has been geopolitically driven all week. The 10-year Treasury sits near 4.67%, the top of its recent range, after a three-session whipsaw that had little to do with mortgage fundamentals.
Here is the sequence. Tuesday brought a sharp sell-off that Mortgage News Daily attributed not to data but to one large account's liquidations — a technical move, not a fundamental one. Wednesday more than reversed it with a broad-based rally on war-related headlines. Then overnight into Thursday, bonds turned red again after a statement from Iran's leadership that uranium should not leave the country became a sticking point in peace negotiations; oil firmed and yields followed. None of this is a referendum on inflation or the Fed — it is headline risk, and headline risk cuts both ways. The VIX at 17.4 says the broader market is not panicking.
For origination the takeaway is range, not direction. Freddie's last weekly average was 6.36% as of May 14, but that print is stale — the 10-year has added roughly 20 basis points since, and the MBA's more current weekly survey already puts the 30-year at 6.56%. Lender sheets have firmed to match. With the tape moving on headlines rather than data, intraday swings are wider than usual: a borrower who floated through Wednesday's rally and didn't lock watched part of it evaporate by Thursday morning. For in-flight deals that argues for locking on strength rather than waiting for a cleaner story the calendar isn't going to provide this week.
A couple of things worth catching up on from the week, since the headlines were elsewhere. The MBA reported mortgage applications fell 2.3%, with the purchase index down 4%, as its survey rate pushed into the upper sixes — demand is visibly rate-sensitive right at these levels, and that cohort math is worth watching while the 10-year holds its range. Separately, Rocket Mortgage and Redfin rolled out a select-market savings program that pairs lender credits with commission discounts worth up to $20,000 per transaction — competitive intel worth having on hand the next time a buyer mentions either brand.
pull your list of borrowers currently floating and call the ones closing within 30 days. With the bond market trading on geopolitical headlines instead of economic data, there is no calendar event to wait for — lock the deals that pencil now rather than betting on a rally the news flow can't promise.