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Marketing Pulse Jun 22

The hook this week is buyer leverage, not the rate

Record seller concessions just handed you a positive, borrower-facing story — and a seller credit is the cleanest way to talk payment without waiting on rates to move.

Monday, June 22, 2026 30Y 6.54%15Y 5.85%5/1 ARM 6.32%

The marketing opening this week isn't the rate — it's leverage. Redfin reports 46% of home sellers gave concessions to buyers in May, the highest May share on record, and the concentration tells the story: roughly three-quarters of Nashville sellers paid to close, with the Bay Area at the bottom. Paired with HousingWire's read on softening prices, the message for your buyers is genuinely upbeat — the market has tilted toward them in much of the country. That's a fresher, more positive hook than the "quiet rate week, make your own angle" posture of the past two weeks, and it's a story borrowers actually want to hear.

On rates, the backdrop is steady: the 30-year is holding around 6.53%, flat over the past week and a few hundredths lower over the past month, sitting mid-pack in its 90-day range of 6.23% to 6.70%. So the rate itself isn't the headline — the concession-funded buydown is. A seller credit in today's environment can run well into five figures, and that money is the cleanest path to a lower payment. The segment to focus on is the fence-sitting purchase buyer who got pre-approved, saw the monthly number, and stalled. The math is the pitch: a roughly half-point permanent buydown on a $400K loan drops the payment by about $130 a month, and the cost of that buydown — around two points — fits comfortably inside a record-high concession.

The tactical move is to build one reusable asset around this and stop improvising. Make a single "a seller credit is a free rate buydown" explainer — a 30-second reel plus a one-page PDF that walks a buyer from "$10K credit" to "$130/month lower payment" in plain numbers. It's evergreen for as long as concessions stay elevated, it positions you as the LO who understands the negotiation and not just the loan, and it gives your buyer's agent partners something concrete to forward. Reuse it across social, email to your stalled pre-approvals, and a quick text to agents.

Do this today

record one 30-second "sellers are paying buyers right now — here's how to turn that into a lower payment" video and send it to your three most-stalled pre-approved buyers.

Borrower segments to act on today

Stalled purchase buyers to re-engage with concessions

Pre-approved purchase buyers in flight for 2+ months are the prime audience for the seller-credit story — most paused on the monthly payment, and a concession-funded buydown is exactly the lever that moves them off the fence.

active loans · ≥2mo since close · purchases
Refi window: closed loans above 7.25%

With the 30Y at 6.53%, borrowers who closed above 7.25% are roughly 75+ bps in the money — about $190/mo on a $400K loan, a break-even comfortably under 18 months at standard costs.

closed loans · rate ≥7.25%

Today’s content angles

Short-form video

'Sellers are paying buyers right now' 30-sec reel

Face-to-camera, plain numbers: 'Right now a lot of sellers are offering credits to get their home sold — and that credit can buy your rate down. On a $400K home, a typical seller credit can lower your payment by around $130 a month. If you got pre-approved and the payment gave you pause, message me CREDIT and I'll show you exactly how it works on your number.' Keep it borrower-friendly — dollars and months, no jargon.

Tactics worth stealing

Lead re-engagement emails with a specific dollar credit

Re-engaging stalled buyers, put the concrete number in the subject line — 'A seller credit could cut your payment ~$130/mo' beats 'Still thinking about buying?' A specific dollar figure drives most of the open-rate variance on cold re-engagement sends.

HubSpot Email Marketing Trends 2024