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Marketing Pulse Jun 19

Market the payment, not the Fed: affordability is the live story

With the median housing payment at a one-year high and the 30-year at the low end of its range, the differentiated play is payment coaching, not rate predictions.

Friday, June 19, 2026 30Y 6.54%15Y 5.85%5/1 ARM 6.32%

The mortgage-marketing conversation is shifting off the Fed and onto affordability, and the data is handing you the hook. Redfin reports the median U.S. housing payment just hit a one-year high of $2,647, and pending sales have fallen five weeks running — buyers are not gone, they are parked on the sidelines over the monthly number. After a week where every LO posted Fed-reaction content, the differentiated move is to stop talking about where rates are going and start talking about the payment your borrower can actually act on.

The rate backdrop helps the pitch. At 6.48% the 30-year is sitting at the low end of its 30-day range — not falling, but the cheap end of where it has traded lately. So the honest framing for paused buyers is "the rate is at the better end of its recent range; the work now is the price and the structure." For borrowers carrying rates north of about 7.5%, the refi math still clears on a typical loan — but that is a narrow cohort, so target it precisely rather than blasting your whole book.

The tactical play this week is a "payment reality check" sequence: a short post or email that names a real monthly number on a local price point ("a $425K home in your market runs about this much a month right now") and offers a one-page breakdown. It reframes the conversation from the abstract rate to the concrete payment — and it pairs naturally with the affordability levers most buyers do not know to ask about: seller-paid rate buydowns, ARM pricing, and tuning the target price. Cite the payment, show a lever, invite the reply.

Do this today

build one "payment reality check" post for your top local price point — name the monthly number at today's rate, name one lever that lowers it, and end with "reply and I'll run yours."

Borrower segments to act on today

Paused purchase buyers: re-engage on the payment

Affordability is the documented sticking point — national payments just hit a one-year high. These in-flight purchase borrowers stalled on the monthly number; with the 30-year at the low end of its 30-day range, you have a concrete reason to re-open the conversation.

active loans · purchases
Rate-relief refis at 7.5%+ where the math truly clears

At 6.48% the break-even only works for borrowers well above current rates. Holding the threshold at 7.5%+ keeps your refi outreach honest and high-converting instead of pitching savings the numbers won't deliver.

closed loans · rate ≥7.50%

Today’s content angles

Social post

'What a home actually costs per month' local-price explainer

Short post or reel: 'Quick reality check on what a home costs per month right now. A $425,000 home with 10% down runs about $2,560 a month, principal and interest, at today's rate. If that number feels high, there are levers — a seller-paid rate buydown, adjusting the price target, or a shorter-term option — that can bring it down more than people expect. Tell me your target price and I'll send your real monthly number, no guessing.'

Email

Seller-paid buydown one-pager for stalled buyers

Email to paused buyers: 'Hey — quick idea if the monthly payment is what's holding you back. On a lot of homes right now, sellers are willing to cover a rate buydown that can drop your payment meaningfully for the first year or two while you settle in. On a $400K loan that can be the difference between a yes and a maybe. Want me to show you what it would look like on a home in your range? Reply and I'll put the numbers together.'

Tactics worth stealing

Name a real local number, not a national average

Generic 'rates are low' posts get scrolled past; a specific monthly payment on a real local price point stops the scroll because the reader can picture their own situation. Anchor every affordability post to a price your market actually transacts at, and pair the number with one concrete lever — specificity plus a next step out-converts vague reassurance every time.

NAR Home Buyer & Seller Generational Trends (buyer-behavior research)