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Rate Pulse Jun 24

30-year eases to 6.58% in quiet trade; Friday PCE still the swing factor

Mortgage pricing slipped a few bps with no new catalyst, leaving the 30-year mid-range as Friday's inflation print looms as the week's only real mover.

Wednesday, June 24, 202610Y Treasury 4.51%
30Y fixed
6.54%
+4bps today
15Y fixed
5.85%
7d -6bps
5/1 ARM
6.32%
30d -5bps
Now

The bond market stayed quiet again today, and mortgage pricing actually eased a touch — Bankrate's 30-year average slipped to 6.58% from 6.61% yesterday, down about 5 bps on the week. The 10-year firmed marginally to roughly 4.51%, so the move is pricing-driven, not a Treasury rally. There's no fresh catalyst to add to what we've covered this week; the MBA's applications index did tick up 1.0% for the week ending June 19, with refis up 3% — a sign borrowers are watching even a flat tape.

Next

Friday's May PCE print is still the only thing on the calendar with the weight to move rates, the same catalyst we've flagged since Monday. A cooler-than-expected core number would give the 30-year room to test the low end of its recent range; a hot print likely pins it near 6.6% into month-end. Until Friday, expect the same low-volatility drift — no Fed speakers or auctions large enough to break it.

Range

Today's 6.58% sits right in the middle of the 90-day range (6.23% to 6.70%) and just above the 90-day average of 6.51%, a hair below the 30-day average of 6.56%. We're neither rich nor cheap — call it fair-value chop. The 6.23% low from earlier in the quarter is the level refi-watchers want back; we're about 35 bps north of it, close enough that a single soft inflation print could reopen that conversation.

Do

The fresh angle today is the government-loan spread. FHA is pricing around 6.23% and VA near 6.25% — roughly 35 bps under the 6.58% conventional 30-year — and HUD just pushed through another 14 FHA single-family streamlining changes. Borrowers carrying FHA or VA notes from the 2023–24 peak are the cleanest streamline-refi candidates right now: lower rate, lighter documentation, and no new appraisal on many VA IRRRLs. Do this today: pull every FHA and VA loan in your closed book above 7% and flag the streamline-eligible ones for a payment-comparison text this week.

Paste-ready talking points

  • Today's payment on a $400K loan runs about $2,540 a month — roughly $185 less than the same loan at 7.25%.
  • If you have an FHA or VA loan from 2023 or 2024, a streamline refinance could lower your payment with less paperwork — worth a 5-minute check.
  • Here's a small thing most folks miss: government-backed loans are pricing about a third of a percent below conventional right now.
  • Every month you wait on a refinance you'd qualify for is a month of the higher payment you don't get back.
  • Reply RATE and I'll text you a one-page payment breakdown for your exact loan — no obligation.

Sample client message

FHA & VA borrowers from 2023–2024
SubjectQuick refi check for {client}

Hey {client}, quick note — if you've got an FHA or VA loan from a couple years back, this is a good week to take a look. Rates have settled into the mid-6s, and government-backed loans like yours are actually pricing a little lower than that right now. On a $400K balance, the gap between your current payment and today's number could be in the ballpark of $185 a month, and the streamline option for FHA and VA loans usually means lighter paperwork and, for many VA loans, no new appraisal. I'm not saying it's automatically worth it — but it's a 10-minute check on my end. Reply with a good time and I'll run your exact numbers and send a one-page breakdown. Even if the answer is wait, you'll know where you stand.