You’re reading the Saturday, July 4 edition. Showing an earlier Pulse.
The Pulse Jul 4

Rates quiet on the holiday — the listing-access fight isn't

The bond market is closed and rates are holding near 6.5%, but the escalating Zillow–Compass–MRED fight over where listings appear is the week's story that actually touches your referral pipeline.

Saturday, July 4, 2026 30-yr 6.540%10-yr Treasury 4.480%

It's a genuinely quiet Fourth of July Saturday — the bond market is closed, there are no new economic prints, and the one rate story of the week (Thursday's soft June jobs report) was already priced and already covered here. So the honest read this morning: nothing in rates needs your attention today. The development actually worth tracking is playing out in the real-estate-brokerage world, and it touches your referral pipeline more than your rate sheet.

The Zillow–Compass–MRED listing fight escalated this week. Compass CEO Robert Reffkin took the stand in the Chicago injunction hearing, and MRED's chief testified that Zillow threatened litigation over listing-access standards; briefs are due July 9 and 13. Underneath the courtroom drama is a real question for you: where your agent partners' listings are allowed to appear, and whether "private" or delayed-syndication inventory becomes more common. Consumer groups separately asked the FTC and DOJ to probe Compass's MLS deals over off-MLS "pocket" listings. None of it changes a rate lock — but the LO who can speak fluently about it to a listing-agent partner on Monday looks like the pro in the room.

On rates themselves: the 30-year is sitting around 6.5% (Bankrate's daily read at 6.54%), down about six-hundredths of a point on the week and a nickel on the month — modest easing, not a trend break. Notably, the 10-year Treasury actually firmed into month-end (near 4.48%) even as mortgage pricing slipped, which means lender spreads did the work, not the benchmark. Today's 6.54% sits right at its 30-day average and in the middle of the 90-day range — the spring lows near 6.23% are not where we are now. The next real catalyst is the mid-month CPI print; until then, expect the range to hold.

Things you may have missed this week: April Case-Shiller showed home-price gains (up 0.8%) running behind inflation (3.8%) — useful for the buyer worried they're "buying the top." The Treasury officially launched Trump Accounts, the tax-advantaged newborn savings accounts created under last year's tax law — a long-horizon, future-first-time-buyer wealth angle worth a client-newsletter mention. And HousingWire noted a recent Supreme Court birthright-citizenship ruling has removed enough uncertainty for some affected households to move forward on a first purchase. On the roughly 72-hour recap: the soft 57,000 June jobs print remains the week's only market-moving event, and it is already in the rate.

One more worth filing: HousingWire reports Google's AI Mode passed a billion monthly users and roughly 93% of those searches end without a click — the ground under "get found online" is shifting from links to AI answers. It is not a today problem, but it is the reason your Google Business Profile, your reviews, and plain-language FAQ content matter more than another blog post this year.

pick ONE of the week's stories — most likely the Zillow/Compass listing fight — and draft a two-sentence take you can text a listing-agent partner Monday morning. On a holiday Saturday, the highest-leverage move isn't a rate blast nobody will read; it's showing a referral source you're the one who follows the industry, not just the rate sheet.

What this brief is built on

1
HousingWire — Real Estate4d ago

Reffkin takes the stand, MRED CEO says Zillow threatened litigation over listing policy dispute

Compass and MRED leaders testified Zillow threatened litigation over listing access standards, briefs due July 9 and July 13.

2
Treasury Press3d ago

U.S. Treasury Announces the Official Launch of Trump Accounts and Full Scope of the App

3
The Mortgage Point (DSNews/MReport)4d ago

Congressman to CFPB: ‘The First Step of Many We Can Take’

In a letter to Russell Vought, Acting Director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), Rep. Maxwell Frost, D-Florida, urged the bureau to look into rent now, pay later businesses, and hold them accountable for possible infractions of federal consumer financial protection laws. The post Congressman to CFPB:…

4
HousingWire — Real EstateJun 30

April Case-Shiller shows inflation outpacing home prices

April Case-Shiller increased 0.8% as inflation hit 3.8%, the 20-city index rose 1.1% and Seattle fell 2.3%.

5
HousingWire — Real Estate6d ago

Birthright citizenship ruling could boost homebuying confidence

For many affected households weighing whether to buy a first home, the ruling removes uncertainty surrounding their future in the U.S.

6
HousingWire — Real EstateJun 29

The new real estate playbook is getting cited by AI, not clicked on

AI Mode reached 1 billion monthly users in 2026, and 93% of searches there end without clicks, accelerating AEO for real estate.

7
HousingWire — Real EstateJun 30

When AI listing videos look too real: the disclosure test agents need now

Agents using AI listing videos should disclose simulated footage and material edits, as states like California set 2026 rules.