The bond market is quiet — no new catalyst this weekend to add to what we covered around Thursday's PCE. The 10-year is anchored at 4.40%, the consumer 30-year sits at 6.54% (Freddie's weekly survey reads 6.49%), and day over day there's effectively no move. PCE came in cooler Thursday and bonds got a friendly reversal, but wide spreads kept that from reaching the mortgage rate — the same setup we flagged Friday. Net of the noise, the 30-year is up a token two basis points on the week and about four lower than a month ago: flat, not falling.
The calendar is the story for next week, not this weekend. Monday is quarter-end (June 30), which can bring some rate-sheet jumpiness as desks square positions, but that's a technical move, not a fundamental one. The first week of July carries the real catalysts — ISM data and the June jobs report — in a holiday-shortened week around the Fourth. Until a print actually surprises, expect the 10-year to keep holding its range and mortgage pricing to track it. Nothing on deck this weekend moves a rate sheet.
Today's 6.54% sits essentially on its 30-day average (6.54%) and just above the 90-day midpoint (6.51%). We're about 31 basis points off the 90-day low of 6.23% and 16 below the 90-day high of 6.70% — squarely mid-range, neither rich nor cheap. For an in-flight deal, that argues for locking rather than gambling on a breakout in either direction; there's no technical edge to floating out of the middle of a tight band into a holiday week.
The lens worth using this weekend is the one the headline rate has been hiding: term and product spread. The 15-year is at 5.93% — roughly 60 basis points under the 30-year — and FHA and VA are quoting in the low 6.0s, about 45 under conventional. The segment to focus on isn't the conventional rate-shopper waiting for a drop that isn't coming; it's the refinance candidate with cash flow to spare who could shorten to a 15-year, and the veteran or FHA-eligible buyer who's been comparing only the headline 30-year. Do this today: Pull two files where the borrower has strong cash flow and 20-plus years left on a 30-year above 6.75%, and run the 15-year math — at 5.93% the monthly bump is often smaller than people expect, and it's a fresh conversation that has nothing to do with whether rates fall.