The all-important 10-year T-note at 1.92 percent today is flirting with the highs since the big drop in early August and has risen steadily since the September low. However, with the Fed on hold, we have little risk of the kind of big run upward that we saw last year.
Source: Inman News
No worries for markets over Christmas holidays
More from ColumnsMore posts in Columns »
- 7 strategies to turn today’s bad economic news into more deals
- Agents maneuver a labyrinthine legal landscape: The Download
- Commission lawsuits, updates, getting listings: Inman Top 5
- Build bridges with these answers to frequent NAR settlement queries
- Still standing: Realtor resilience for challenging times
More from Jerome PowellMore posts in Jerome Powell »
- Homebuyers rush to lock as mortgage rates hit new 2024 highs
- Fed preparing to slow the pace of ‘quantitative tightening’
- Many hoped a March rate cut would boost housing. Now, it’s not so clear
- Homebuyer purchase loan demand falls again as mortgage rates firm
- Mortgage rates poised to drop as Fed projects 3 cuts
More from lou barnesMore posts in lou barnes »
More from Markets & EconomyMore posts in Markets & Economy »
- Luxury home prices have reached new heights: Redfin
- 7 strategies to turn today’s bad economic news into more deals
- Gone, not forgotten: The Oklahoma City bombing 29 years later
- Existing-home sales drop in March as high rates stun homebuyers
- 2 buyers scramble to make a deal as the spring market sprints ahead
More from OpinionMore posts in Opinion »
- Shape real estate’s future: Take the Inman Intel Index survey for April
- Build bridges with these answers to frequent NAR settlement queries
- You have 3 brokerage models to choose from. Which works for you?
- Ditch generic marketing: Convey your value with storytelling
- 3 ways to lead by example — and focus on what you can control
More from RezoningMore posts in Rezoning »
More from SelectMore posts in Select »
More from the federal reserveMore posts in the federal reserve »
- 2 buyers scramble to make a deal as the spring market sprints ahead
- Sluggish net new listings signal that the lock-in effect is not over
- Mark McLaughlin: Client trust is all that matters — all else is ‘noise’
- Skittish sellers, hungry buyers: How the Fed tanked housing
- ‘Just a freakish bit of data’: Sticker shock imperils spring home demand
Be First to Comment