But maybe forecasters will be less wrong this year. To their credit, for the most part forecasters seem convinced that rates will stay elevated during 2025. The consensus is that there are few catalysts that will allow mortgage rates to drop into the 5s. A year ago, there were plenty of forecasters who were imagining a 5 handle by the end of 2024. That never arrived and those chastened forecasters are less sanguine about next year.
Even though the consensus is less optimistic than last year, even in this year’s outlooks, almost none of the forecasters — except HousingWire — published expectations for the range of rates to reach above 7% during the year. And yet at the end of 2024, that’s exactly where rates are. With recent inflation news and the Fed expressing less confidence in rate cuts in 2025, the momentum is for higher mortgage rates into the new year.
It can be a little tricky comparing apples-to-apples on forecast statements. Some forecasters state an average for the year, some frame a range with no average. Some are stated with quarterly expectations, others are annual. The economics team at NAR, for example, has stated assumptions of “near 6%” for the year. The Goldman Sachs strategists see, “above 6%” for the year. The economics team at Zillow expects rates to “be lower at the end of the year” with “plenty of bumps in the path.”
While still others, such as those from Realtor.com discuss an average for the year of 6.3%, ending the year at 6.2%.
We’ve compiled a table, with some interpretation from these official company statements into a single view in order to visualize comparisons. For companies that gave a range, we’ve interpreted the average for the year inside that range. For companies that used descriptive language, we’ve interpreted the range.
<\/script>The HousingWire forecast for mortgage rates in 2025 is a range between 5.75% and 7.25%.
Some observers scoff at the wide 150 basis point range in our expectations for the year, as though it’s a cop-out. But our take is that the market is starting high and there’s a real risk of negative news that pushes rates above 7%. At the same time, if we’re lucky, a combination of beneficial macroeconomic news and tighter spreads might allow for a dip in rates under 6% at some point during the year. Because of big economic surprises, each of the last three years have had volatile mortgage markets with trading ranges of 350bp, 200bp and 140bp. We expect a similar volatility and rate range for 2025.
For mortgage rates to spend the year “near 6%” that assumes easing inflation and softer jobs numbers. The bond market must be satisfied that the economy is cooling in order for rates to ease lower. These expectations have been common for three years now, maybe 2025 is when they finally come to fruition.
The low end of the forecast range also could benefit from decreasing mortgage spreads – the risk premium difference between the 30-year fixed rate mortgage and the yield on the 10-year treasury bond. Spreads have been elevated for three years and have been slowly declining in late 2024. The low end of the HousingWire forecast range (5.75%) includes a scenario where the yield on the 10-year drops to a recent low of perhaps 3.5% and the spread simultaneously eases lower to 225 basis points. That lucky combination would leave mortgage rates at 5.75%.
Redfin has arguably the most pessimistic take on mortgage rates for the calendar year 2025. The economics team at Redfin has stated expectations of an average of 6.8% on the 30-year fixed for each quarter during the year. With a slightly lower average for the year, HousingWire’s upper end of the forecast assumes that mortgage rates could spend some time above 7% in 2025, possibly as high as 7.25%.
These bearish takes assume surprises with elevated inflation data or similar economic strength which occasionally spikes interest rates higher. As evidenced by the Fed’s December meeting, these spikes can happen quickly.
Mortgage rates finally eased down a bit in the third quarter of this year. But as the presidential election neared, that reprieve proved short lived. One of the difficulties of making a forecast like this is that there are infinite exogenous factors that drive the bond markets. At HousingWire, we can only assume those factors will surprise us, and that they’ll end up with mortgage rates in a wide trading range for the year. Recent events show how quickly any news can evaporate. 2025 promises to be a bumpy ride.
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