Following Donald Trump's Presidential election win, 30-year fixed mortgage rates briefly surged, settling at 6.98% as of Thursday, according to Mortgage News Daily .
Recent interest rate cuts have brought relief to credit card, personal loan and auto borrowers, but homebuyers are unlikely to catch a break as mortgage rates continue to climb.
While mortgage rates often move in step with the Fed's benchmark rate, they're more directly tied to 10-year Treasury bond yields.
These yields tend to rise when investors expect stronger economic growth and higher inflation — even when the Federal Reserve is cutting the federal funds rate.
Either way, "continued deficit spending, coupled with discussions of additional tariffs on imports, is likely to keep [mortgage] rates elevated through the remainder of 2024," says Nourmand.
Persons:
Donald Trump's, Melissa Cohn, William Raveis, Harris, Michael Nourmand, —
Organizations:
Reserve, Mortgage News, Federal Reserve, William Raveis Mortgage, Trump, Associates, CNBC
Locations:
New York, Los Angeles