Weekly Mortgage Rates Rise Despite Easing Economic Conditions
This article was first published on NerdWallet.com.
Mortgage rates spiked the week ending July 3, with the average rate for a 30-year, fixed-rate loan rising above 7% yet again.
The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 7.01% APR, up 20 basis points from the previous week's average, according to rates provided to NerdWallet by Zillow. A basis point is one one-hundredth of a percentage point.
Rising rates, ebbing economy
If anything, mortgage rates probably should have fallen this week — and not just because folks' minds are on hot dogs and fireworks, not home buying and selling.
Economic data that came out this week wasn't especially splashy, but it pointed toward an economy that's cooling down. The Federal Reserve's preferred measure of inflation showed that consumer prices month over month remained essentially flat. Construction spending dropped for the first time in 18 months, coming in below market expectations. Employment remains strong, but earlier numbers were revised downward, implying labor markets might be on an even keel.
Federal Reserve unbothered
Together, these figures indicate that the Federal Reserve's strategy — raising interest rates, and then holding them high — is working. By making it more expensive to...