The weekend delivered a setup that cuts against the recent headline rate narrative. Altos data via HousingWire shows pending home sales rose to 79,220 against 74,212 a year ago — a 6.7% YoY gain — while inventory growth has slowed to 1.49% YoY and is edging toward outright contraction. Daily mortgage quotes ranged 6.33% to 6.42% across the weekend (Mortgage Daily print at 6.33%, Altos daily survey at 6.42%) with Freddie's weekly still anchored at 6.30%. Translation: demand is resilient and supply is tightening even as rates sit in the upper half of their 90-day range. That combination resets purchase-side conversations — buyer-fence borrowers who've been waiting for "rates to come down" are about to face a tighter inventory market regardless of which way the rate goes.
The demand resilience runs against the Federal Reserve's April Financial Stability Report, which flagged asset valuations as elevated and noted "investors are beginning to demand more compensation for risk amid rising uncertainty around monetary policy." That tension — strong housing demand, Fed signaling market overheating, rates pinned at the top of recent range — sets up two scenarios. Either demand cools naturally as buyers exhaust dry powder, or the Fed warning becomes self-fulfilling and broader market vol pushes rates higher before any cooling shows up. Neither scenario favors borrowers waiting for rate relief.
30Y mortgage held 6.30% on Freddie's most recent weekly (4/30 print), with daily quotes drifting in the 6.33%–6.42% band. The 10Y settled at 4.43%, down 2bps Friday from 4.45%. No fresh econ catalyst lands this week until CPI mid-month. For in-flight purchase pipeline the lock-vs-float math hasn't shifted enough to chase — the inventory-tightening argument is now a stronger reason to push a deal through today than the rate-rate argument is to wait. For refis at 7%+, today's 6.33–6.42% range still works for break-even inside 18 months on standard origination costs.
M&A continuity from last week: REMAX Q1 results show North American agent count and revenue slipping as the Real Brokerage merger moves toward close — Inman frames the shrinking US business as "soon to be Real's problem." On the content side, Jimmy Burgess (Inman) published "3 market myths holding your clients back" — useful framing if you co-create educational content with agents. HUD published three Federal Register information-collection notices over the weekend (ROSS, Small Cities, Community Choice Demonstration) — standard comment-period bureaucracy with no actionable impact for origination.
pull the list of purchase-fence borrowers from the last 60 days who pulled quotes but haven't moved, and send them a one-line text — "inventory growth just slowed to 1.49% YoY; the houses you're watching have less competition coming in the next 90 days, not more." That conversation shifts the lever from "rates" to "supply," which is the actual variable working against them this spring.