Markets closed Friday at 6.45% on Bankrate's daily quote and held flat through the weekend — the two-day pullback from Wednesday's 6.47% high appears to have stuck. The 10Y settled at 4.43%, unchanged from Friday. Mortgage Daily's Sunday print landed at 6.33% (different methodology, broader survey set) and Altos via HousingWire showed 6.42% — the range across daily quotes narrowed materially over the weekend, suggesting positioning rather than directional intent. The only weekend story with rate implications was the Federal Reserve's April Financial Stability Report, which flagged asset valuations as elevated and noted investors are "beginning to demand more compensation for risk amid rising uncertainty around monetary policy." That's a setup that amplifies volatility on the next econ surprise in either direction.
The week ahead is light on top-tier data prints, with the next clean catalyst being the mid-month CPI report. Treasury auctions are routine and Fed speakers will continue the data-dependent script with no new directional commitment until the next dot plot. Watch the 10Y around 4.40% — a clean break below opens 4.30% and pulls the 30Y down toward 6.30%. Given the FSR's concern about valuations, the surprise direction may not be where consensus expects: a hot CPI marries with the FSR concern and pulls yields up faster than the print alone would suggest; a cool print still faces a Fed reluctant to telegraph cuts in an "elevated valuations" environment.
6.45% sits 2bps below the 90-day HIGH (range 5.98%–6.47%, average 6.26%) and 18bps above the 30-day average of 6.37%. The week is up 7bps; the month is flat. For borrowers quoted at the February floor (5.98%), today is still 47bps above their reference — those reconversations need a different opening than "rates are stable." Layer on the inventory tightening that landed in yesterday's housing data (1.49% YoY growth, demand actually outpacing supply on a YoY basis), and the borrower-side trade-off has shifted away from "wait for rates to drop" toward "wait for inventory to recover" — which is now arguably the worse bet of the two.
Two segments to work today. Purchase-fence borrowers from February who pulled quotes at 5.98–6.20% need the double-variable pivot — "your number changed AND inventory is tightening." Refi candidates from 2023 at 7%+ get the unchanged savings math ($210/mo on a $400K loan at 7.25% → 6.45%). Do this today: send your February-quote purchase-fence list a one-line text that ties both variables — "your quote of [rate]% is now 6.45%, AND inventory growth just slowed to 1.49% YoY; the wait math got worse on both sides this week." Two replies become two real conversations on Monday morning.