{"id":4799,"date":"2023-11-04T21:34:37","date_gmt":"2023-11-04T21:34:37","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/frankbuysphilly.com\/have-mortgage-rates-peaked-for-this-cycle\/"},"modified":"2023-11-04T21:34:37","modified_gmt":"2023-11-04T21:34:37","slug":"have-mortgage-rates-peaked-for-this-cycle","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/frankbuysphilly.com\/have-mortgage-rates-peaked-for-this-cycle\/","title":{"rendered":"Have mortgage rates peaked for this cycle?"},"content":{"rendered":"


\n<\/p>\n

After mortgage rates<\/a> spiked to 8%<\/a> in October, causing a riot in the real estate industry, we had an epic move lower in mortgage rates last week. Does this mean we’ve hit the peak in mortgage rates for this economic cycle?\u00a0The history of economic cycles and mortgage rates would say yes, but only if the market believes the Federal Reserve<\/a><\/strong> is done hiking rates and being hawkish and the labor data gets softer from here.<\/p>\n

Mortgage rates and the 10-year yield<\/strong><\/h2>\n

The 10-year yield has had a wild ride this week, especially during overnight trading. The 10-year yield hit a high of 4.93% <\/strong>after hours <\/strong>on Halloween, then dropped as low as 4.48% <\/strong>on Friday. As I have stressed, mortgage rates move with the 10-year yield, and we saw a noticeable move lower this week.<\/p>\n

So what happened triggered the drop? Three of the four labor reports were softer than anticipated on jobs week. At this stage of the economic cycle, softer labor market data is vital not only for the Fed to pivot, but for the 10-year yield and mortgage rates to go lower.<\/p>\n

Job openings data was fine, but the ADP<\/strong> jobs report came in as a miss, jobless claims came in worse than anticipated, and the jobs Friday report<\/a> showed a slowdown in job and wage growth. <\/p>\n

The Fed had its meeting on Wednesday and didn\u2019t hike rates, but added the term that financial conditions and credit conditions now will lead to lower economic activity in the future. These variables put together sent bond yields and mortgage rates lower, and the slow dance between the 10-year yield and mortgage rates continued as it has since 1971. <\/p>\n

Weekly housing inventory dat<\/strong>a<\/h2>\n

All I want for Christmas is one week of active inventory growth to be between 11,000-17,000 and not even Santa Claus can help me out here because the inventory growth rate has slowed down once again. I am running out of time as seasonality is kicking in, which means we are getting closer to the seasonal inventory decline for 2023. It looks like I will bat a whopping 0 in 2023 for my higher rates inventory growth level forecast.<\/p>\n

Last year, the seasonal peak for housing inventory <\/a>was Oct. 28, according to Altos Research<\/a>. We might have reached the peak in inventory last week or next week. <\/p>\n