Mortgage rates pulled back slightly after jumping on the Fed announcement.
The move was not simply about the Fed’s current rate decision. Markets reacted more strongly to the Fed’s updated outlook, especially the possibility that rate cuts may take longer or that future rate hikes could still remain on the table.
This matters because mortgage rates are tied more closely to long-term bond yields than to the federal funds rate itself. The Fed does not directly set mortgage rates, but its comments can quickly shift investor expectations.
For buyers, this means one thing: even when mortgage rates improve for a day, volatility can remain high.
After the initial spike, 30-year fixed mortgage rates recovered part of the previous day’s losses. However, they were still not fully back to where they were before the Fed announcement.
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