Published Date 9/2/2025
Conventional and Government (FHA and VA) lenders set their rates based on the pricing of Mortgage-Backed Securities (MBS) which are traded in real time, all day in the bond market. This means rates or loan fees (mortgage pricing) moves throughout the day, being affected by a variety of economic or political events. When MBS pricing goes up, mortgage rates or pricing generally goes down. When they fall, mortgage pricing goes up.
Mortgage rates are under a little pressure today. The MBS market improved by +19 bps last week. This was not enough to decrease mortgage rates or fees. The market experienced high volatility last week.
These are the three things that have the greatest ability to impact rates week. 1) Geopolitical, 2) Jobs, 3) The Fed.
1) Geopolitical: With the backdrop of ongoing global conflicts, we now have more Tariff Turmoil as an U.S. Appeals Court has ruled that the President does not have the authority to implement some of the tariffs. This will eventually end up in the Supreme Court and the tariffs will stay in place until then. However, new tariffs under that specific program will not happen.
2) Jobs: It will be Big Jobs Friday this week. But every day we will have a job or wage related data point with a deluge of other reports. On Friday, the focus will be on the revisions to the Non-Farm Payrolls and to see if the Unemployment Rate ticks up.
3) The Fed: We will get the Fed's Beige Book on Wednesday and have a slew of talking Feds this week. But the speakers on Friday will get the most weight.
This morning markets started under pressure due to renewed uncertainty around tariffs. Volatility has started at moderate to high levels and will likely stay that way all week.
If you are looking for the risks and benefits of locking your interest rate in today or floating your loan rate, contact your mortgage professional to discuss it with them.
Source: TBWSAll information furnished has been forwarded to you and is provided by thetbwsgroup only for informational purposes. Forecasting shall be considered as events which may be expected but not guaranteed. Neither the forwarding party and/or company nor thetbwsgroup assume any responsibility to any person who relies on information or forecasting contained in this report and disclaims all liability in respect to decisions or actions, or lack thereof based on any or all of the contents of this report.
Jeff Beck - NMLS ID: 19488. To verify licensing, visit NMLS Consumer Access (www.nmlsconsumeraccess.org).
NMLS: 19488
American Home Lending USA
240 S Buchanan St, Edwardsville IL 62025
Company NMLS: 2239
Office: 618-310-0091
Cell: 618-806-2281
Email: jbeck@ahlusa1.com
NMLS: 19488
Cell: 618-806-2281
2/13/2026
The last major economic data point this week, January CPI confirmed inflation is... view more
2/12/2026
Walk into any design showroom and you may be overwhelmed by endless tile options... view more
2/10/2026
The Delayed December headline Retail Sales were much lighter than expected...... view more
2/6/2026
At 10 am the preliminary February University of Michigan consumer sentiment inde... view more
2/5/2026
We've all been there—staring at an overstuffed cleaning closet wondering how we ... view more
2/3/2026
The JOLTS report will be delayed due to the government shutdown...... view more
1/30/2026
This morning at 8:30 am ET December 2025 PPI data increased putting pressure on ... view more