The most underused angle in mortgage marketing right now is sitting in this weekend's data: the purchase market is strengthening while most of the feed is still stuck on "rates are high." Purchase applications are up 17% year-over-year, pending sales are running ahead of last year, and for-sale inventory has turned negative — fewer homes, more committed buyers. The lender content that breaks through this week won't be another rate-reaction post; it'll be the agent- and buyer-facing "here's what the data actually shows" angle that reframes the wait.
On the rate side the number to anchor is steady, not falling — the 30-year is holding near 6.57%, up modestly on the month and sitting just above its 90-day average. That stability is itself the message: buyers waiting for a big drop are betting against a narrow range while losing optionality on inventory. The math to put in front of a paused buyer isn't "rates will fall," it's "today's payment on a $400K loan is about $2,550, the range has been tight for 90 days, and the homes you'd choose from are fewer every month."
Two moves this week. First, co-market with your top two agents on a single "Is now actually a bad time to buy?" piece using the demand and inventory numbers — a 60-second video or a one-image carousel you both post, so it lands in two spheres for one build. Second, reactivate paused purchase pre-approvals: anyone pre-approved 60-plus days ago who went quiet gets a "the market shifted — let's refresh your numbers" touch. Those are warmer than cold leads, and the inventory story gives you a non-pushy reason to reach back out.
message your two highest-volume agent partners with one offer — "I'll build us a shared 'state of the market' post this week with the latest buyer-demand data; you post it to your sphere, I'll post it to mine." Co-branded reach beats a solo rate graphic every time.