May Was a Frustrating Month for Anyone Waiting on Rates and Here Is What to Do Instead

June 10, 20263 min read


The Rate Market Delivered a Clear Message in May

If you were tracking mortgage rates in May and hoping for the relief that had seemed like it might finally be arriving you got a clear and frustrating reminder of how rate markets actually work. One hotter than expected inflation report pushed rates higher in a matter of days and undid weeks of gradual improvement in a single move.

This is not unusual. This is the nature of the rate environment and buyers who are building their entire purchasing timeline around rate predictions are consistently finding that the market does not cooperate with the schedule they have in mind.

Why Trying to Time the Market Keeps Failing

The variables that drive mortgage rates are global, complex, and interconnected in ways that produce outcomes no forecaster can consistently predict with the precision that rate-timing strategies require. Inflation data, Federal Reserve communication, geopolitical developments, energy prices, bond market sentiment, and economic releases all interact simultaneously and the result is a rate environment that can shift meaningfully in a very short period of time.

A buyer who built their plan around the lowest rate they saw online two weeks ago is now working from a number that the market has already moved past. A buyer who is waiting for that number to come back before committing is making a bet on a variable that has demonstrated it can move in either direction without warning.

Building a Plan That Works Regardless of Where Rates Go

As John Zialcita explains the right response to rate volatility is not paralysis. It is building a purchasing strategy that produces a good outcome even when rates move against you rather than one that depends on favorable conditions arriving on a convenient timeline.

Start by shopping based on what you can actually afford at today's rates rather than what you saw recently or what you are hoping for. That is the real market. Give yourself a cushion of 0.25 to 0.50 percent above the current rate in your budget numbers so that modest movement before closing does not require rethinking the entire purchase.

When the right home is found expand the conversation with your lender beyond the quoted rate to every tool available to improve the payment and cost structure of the specific transaction. Rate locks protect against upward movement after the contract is signed. Seller credits applied toward a buydown can offset a meaningful portion of any rate increase that has occurred since you started searching. Temporary buydowns funded by the seller reduce the rate for the first one to two years when budget pressure is typically highest. Permanent buydowns lock in a lower rate for the full loan term.

In a market where sellers are motivated to make concessions all of those tools are available and regularly effective for buyers who know how to use them.

The Difference Between Smart Waiting and Hoping

There are circumstances where waiting is a legitimate and reasonable strategy. If there is a specific and realistic basis for expecting prices to soften or inventory to improve in your target market waiting may produce a better outcome than acting right now.

But waiting solely because you are hoping rates will fall to a preferred number before you commit is a fundamentally different kind of waiting. It is a bet on a market variable influenced entirely by factors outside your control and it has a real cost every month in the form of rent payments and potential appreciation on the homes you are choosing not to buy.

The goal is not to predict the market perfectly. It is to buy when the numbers make sense for your specific financial situation with every available tool applied to make those conditions as favorable as possible.

John Zialcita works with buyers to build practical purchasing strategies that account for rate volatility rather than assuming it will resolve conveniently. Follow along for more real-world mortgage advice and reach out to John Zialcita to find out what your numbers actually look like right now.


Sources

FederalReserve.gov MortgageNewsDaily.com BureauOfLaborStatistics.gov BankRate.com Investopedia.com

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