The bond market stayed calm into the close, and mortgage pricing actually drifted lower — Bankrate's 30-year average eased about 10 bps on the day to 6.60%, with the 10-year Treasury holding at 4.50% and the VIX nudging up toward 19.5. The honest week-and-month read is still flat: the 30-year is down roughly 5 bps on the week and 4 bps over the past month, so this is range chop, not the start of a rally. What's different from the last few sessions is the clock — tomorrow morning's PCE print is no longer an abstract "Friday swing factor," it's the next thing to hit the screen.
Friday's May core PCE is the Fed's preferred inflation gauge and the only release this week with the weight to break the range. A cooler-than-expected core number gives the 30-year room to probe the 6.47% low end of its 30-day band; an in-line or hot print likely pins pricing near 6.60% into month-end. After PCE the calendar empties out — month-end index buying early next week is the only technical worth noting, and no Fed speaker on deck outranks the number itself. Net: all of this week's event risk is compressed into one 8:30 a.m. release tomorrow.
Today's 6.60% sits just above both the 30-day average (6.56%) and the 90-day average (6.51%) — upper-middle of a 90-day band that runs 6.23% to 6.70%. The fresher read this week isn't the conventional 30-year, though; it's the rest of the curve. The 15-year has slipped under 6% to 5.96%, and the 5/1 ARM is sitting at 6.22% — about 38 bps beneath the 30-year fixed. For the right borrower that spread is real money, and it's a number most haven't been quoted because the 30-year fixed is the default everyone reaches for.
With PCE landing tomorrow, the in-flight purchase files closing inside 30 days are still a lock-not-float call — that part hasn't changed. But the segment worth a fresh outreach today is different: short-horizon borrowers. Anyone planning to sell or refinance within five to seven years — a move-up buyer, a borrower expecting a liquidity event, a landlord building a portfolio — is paying for three decades of rate certainty they won't use. At 6.22% on a $400K loan, the 5/1 ARM runs roughly $100/month under the 6.60% fixed, and the sub-6% 15-year reshapes the payback for anyone who can carry the higher payment. Do this today: pick five purchase borrowers with a stated short time horizon and send each a two-line note offering an ARM-vs-fixed payment comparison before they default to the 30-year.