Rates are quiet this week and there's no fresh lender, GSE, or regulatory move to react to — so lean into the tactical angle rather than manufacturing a trend. The conventional 30-year is holding at 6.54%, easing only modestly over the past month. On weeks like this, the marketing opening isn't the headline rate at all. It's the spread underneath it — the fact that the rate a borrower gets depends heavily on which loan they use, and most of them have no idea how wide that gap has gotten.
Here's the math worth marketing. FHA is quoting around 6.17% and VA around 6.19% today — roughly 35 basis points under the conventional 30-year. The 15-year sits at 5.88%, nearly two-thirds of a point below the 30-year. On a $400K loan, an FHA or VA borrower is looking at meaningfully lower monthly payments than the conventional headline suggests, and a 15-year candidate trades a higher payment for a dramatically smaller interest bill. That's three distinct borrower segments — gov-loan-eligible, existing FHA/VA holders sitting above today's pricing, and cash-flow-strong owners who could shorten their term — each with a genuine, specific reason to hear from you that has nothing to do with a rate headline moving.
The tactical move: don't blast one "rates are steady" note to your whole database. Sort by loan structure instead. Pull every FHA/VA holder above roughly 6.75% into one list and every conventional borrower with the income to carry a 15-year into another, then send each a message built around their opportunity, not a generic market update. Two clean lists, two specific pitches, zero manufactured urgency — that consistently out-performs a single broad send on a flat-rate week.
run a side-by-side quote on one real FHA/VA-eligible file and one 15-year candidate, screenshot the payment comparison, and turn it into a single "same borrower, three very different payments" social post or text. Concrete numbers from a real scenario beat any abstract rate commentary you could write.