As rates dip and policy shifts, is the housing market about to wake up again?

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Just last week, mortgage rates unexpectedly improved by as much as 0.25%, fueled by the weakest private-sector jobs report in over a year. According to ADP, only 37,000 new jobs were added in May, barely a third of what economists had forecast.

Bond traders didn’t take long to respond. Treasuries rallied. Yields dipped. And mortgage-backed securities followed suit, dragging home loan rates lower.

What does this mean for homebuyers? Maybe not everything, but possibly more than nothing.

Reading between the numbers

The headlines paint a story of job stagnation and economic slowdown. But the underlying details reveal something more nuanced. The majority of the job losses were in small businesses, hospitality, and other service sectors. These aren’t typically the same employment profiles that anchor high-income, high-cost-of-living markets like Orange County.

Buyers in this region, many of whom are financing homes in the $875,000+ range, often earn well over $250,000 annually and tend to work in tech, finance, law, or medicine. These sectors weren’t the ones hit hardest in the ADP report. In other words, while the macro headlines suggest caution, the micro reality here may be more stable than it seems.

And then there’s this: Americans are contributing to their 401(k)s at record levels. Per LinkedIn News, the average contribution rate has risen to 14.3% of income, the highest ever recorded. That’s not a trend typically associated with widespread financial insecurity.

In today’s market, mortgage rates don’t move in a vacuum. They follow bond yields, specifically, the 10-Year Treasury. And after this week’s disappointing labor data, that yield dropped to 4.35%, its lowest in weeks.

As Bloomberg noted:

“Markets are likely to view this through the lens of disappointment on the real growth side… While this represents good news for the US economy in terms of potential rate relief, the improvement already priced into equities and credit spreads could be challenged.”

Translation: what’s bad for job growth may, paradoxically, be good for mortgage shoppers, at least for now.

Meanwhile, in Washington: Fannie, Freddie, and a shift in philosophy

Quietly, a separate conversation is unfolding that could reshape the future of home financing. Reports indicate the Trump administration may not push for full privatization of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, after all. Instead, they might explore a public offering while maintaining government oversight, a strategy aimed more at cash generation than deregulation.

“Maybe there’s a way to take these companies public and use these companies for what they are, which are assets for the American people,” said William Pulte, FHFA Director, in a recent Fox Business interview.

That’s a significant change from earlier ambitions to limit federal involvement. And it could have implications for how affordable mortgages remain in the coming years.

“That is a dramatic shift in focus,” said Jim Parrott, a housing policy adviser under President Obama. “The plan may be to keep substantial control and generate revenue for other policy priorities.”

With Fannie and Freddie controlling $7.8 trillion in assets, even small changes in their structure could ripple through everything from mortgage pricing to investor confidence.

The buyer’s dilemma: Act now, or wait, and see?

Today’s average buyer is older, more financially secure, and more strategic. The Apollo Academy reports that the median homebuyer is now 56 years old. Many are using equity rollovers, sizable down payments, or even retirement withdrawals to fund purchases.

With Redfin showing elevated rental vacancies in 64% of markets, and inflation pressures stabilizing, the case for buying, not just renting, gains a little more footing each week.

But timing is always the wildcard. The Fed’s next FOMC meeting is set for September 17–18, 2025, and many expect it to bring the first of two potential rate cuts this year. If that happens, a wave of buyers could re-enter the market, pulling prices higher and eliminating today’s more favorable escrow conditions.

Is this the bottom of the rate cycle? Too early to say. But there’s a certain stillness in the market now that feels like the calm before something.

Mortgage rates are no longer climbing. Sellers are more open to concessions. Policy winds are in flux. And for buyers with the right financial foundation, this may be one of those moments that feels quiet…until it isn’t.

Whether now is the time to act isn’t a question that can be answered universally. But it’s becoming harder to argue that the window is closing. At the very least, the market has stopped shouting “wait.”

And maybe, just maybe, it’s starting to whisper, “why not now?”

Sources:

Cubie Hernandez is the Chief Technology & Learning Officer, Hispanic Organization of Mortgage Experts (HOME).

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of HousingWire’s editorial department and its owners.

To contact the editor responsible for this piece: [email protected].