What they're not telling you: # Housing Market's Crucial "spring-selling-season-is-in-tatters.html" title="Housing Market's Crucial "Spring Selling Season" Is In Tatters" style="color:#1a1a1a;text-decoration:underline;text-decoration-style:dotted;font-weight:500;">Spring Selling Season" Is In Tatters Mortgage applications to purchase homes have collapsed to levels below even the lockdown panic of spring 2020—a metric that demolishes the narrative sold to investors and the public just months ago. The story seemed airtight. Late last year and into early 2022, financial analysts and real estate boosters promised that the Federal Reserve's anticipated rate cuts would ignite the spring housing market.
What the Documents Show
Falling mortgage rates, they assured us, would unleash pent-up demand. Home sales would surge. Realtors' commissions would "rocket to the moon." The setup was clean, the prediction was confident, and it was wrong. What actually happened reveals the gap between what Fed policy can accomplish and the economic realities constraining ordinary people. Inflation, which had been quietly reheating for months, accelerated further after March and April when energy price spikes hit the market.
Follow the Money
Rather than cutting rates as promised, the Fed pivoted to discussing possible hikes. Longer-term Treasury yields—which mortgage rates track—jumped in response to renewed inflation fears. Mortgage rates, which sit higher than Treasury yields, climbed back to the 6.5% range. The spring selling season that was supposed to rescue the housing market never materialized. The evidence is stark. According to the Mortgage Bankers Association, mortgage applications for home purchases in the latest survey week sat down 34 percent from the same week in 2019.
What Else We Know
This isn't just a dip. The average conforming 30-year fixed mortgage rate hit 6.45%, placing it squarely in the 6-7% band it has occupied since September 2022, with occasional breakouts higher. For seven consecutive weeks, rates have remained trapped in that range. The frozen housing market that has defined the past four years—the period since prices exploded between mid-2020 and mid-2022—shows no signs of thawing. This matters because mortgage applications are a forward-looking indicator. They predict actual home sales.
Primary Sources
- Source: ZeroHedge
- Category: Money & Markets
- Cross-reference independently — don't take our word for it.
Disclosure: NewsAnarchist aggregates from public records, API feeds (Federal Register, CourtListener, MuckRock, Hacker News), and independent media. AI-assisted synthesis. Always verify primary sources linked above.
