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US 30-Year Mortgage Rate Rises for Second Consecutive Week to 6.53%, Hitting Nine-Month High and Challenging Homebuying Sentiment

2026-05-30

Core Overview: The US mortgage market is once again facing high-interest-rate pressure. According to the latest released data, as of May 28, 2026 (Q2 2026), the US 30-year fixed mortgage rate rose to 6.53%, an increase of 0.02 percentage points compared to 6.51% in the previous week (May 21). Mortgage rates have resumed their upward trend after a brief pullback early this year, currently reaching a nearly nine-month high, indicating that long-term borrowing costs are once again challenging the affordability limits of homebuyers.

Key Details: As the benchmark data climbs, other related credit details are also moving higher in tandem. In addition to the 30-year benchmark rate, market data shows that the 15-year fixed mortgage rate also slightly increased from 5.85% in the previous week to 5.87%. High interest rates have directly struck a blow to borrowing willingness. Recent statistics from the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) indicate that overall mortgage application volume dropped by nearly 8.5% in a single week, with refinance application volume—which is more sensitive to interest rates—plunging by approximately 18%, reflecting a significant withdrawal of potential buyers and homeowners looking to trade up.

In-depth Attribution: The crux of the recent persistently high mortgage rates lies in "inflation stickiness" and "geopolitical risks." According to analysis by financial institutions such as Realtor.com, the recent conflict in the Middle East has led to significant uncertainty in international crude oil supplies, and surging energy prices have further pushed US inflation indicators for April (such as the YoY PCE growth rate) beyond market expectations. The rebound in inflation has caused market expectations for a Federal Reserve (Fed) rate cut in the near term to significantly fade, leading to a spike in the 10-year US Treasury yield, which serves as the pricing benchmark for mortgages, and thereby driving mortgage rates upward.

Outlook and Risks: Looking ahead to the short term (1-2 months), if energy prices continue to be disrupted by geopolitics and inflation data fails to cool down substantially, the 30-year mortgage rate is expected to remain hovering at a high level above 6.5%. This not only creates severe headwinds for the peak spring housing market season, but the constrained purchasing power of buyers will also force sellers and builders to re-evaluate pricing. In the medium term (3-6 months), if a substantial de-escalation can be achieved in the Middle East conflict, bringing down oil prices and creating room for the Federal Reserve to pivot its monetary policy, only then can mortgage rates be expected to gradually retreat to a comfortable zone below 6%, thereby injecting fresh momentum into suppressed housing market demand.

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