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US Mortgage Rates Barely Moved After Inflation Hit A Three-Year High

Published May 14, 2026
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Summary:
  • The average 30-year fixed mortgage rate was 6.36% this week, down from 6.37% the week before, per Freddie Mac.
  • April CPI showed inflation hit 3.8%, a three-year high.
  • The odds of a Fed rate cut by December are now just 1.6%, per CME FedWatch.

US inflation just hit its highest level in three years.

Fed rate cut odds for the rest of 2026 have basically gone to zero, and mortgage rates barely moved.

Why Rates Held Steady

Freddie Mac's survey put the average 30-year fixed mortgage rate at 6.36% this week, down from 6.37% the week before. The slight dip came even after Tuesday's CPI showed inflation accelerated to 3.8% - the hottest reading in three years.

Mortgage News Daily's measure has pushed higher in recent days, hitting 6.57% and marking a six-week high. The broader market has been adjusting up, even as the headline weekly number hasn't.

Why? Traders had already started pricing this in. With Iran war energy costs feeding through to consumer prices, the rate-cut bet had been fading for weeks.

The CPI print confirmed it. CME FedWatch now puts the odds of a Fed cut by December at 1.6%.

Every morning, Market Briefs breaks down what moves like this mean for your money - in five minutes a day, plus a free investing masterclass thrown in when you join.

What This Means For Buyers And Refinancers

The Fed doesn't directly set mortgage rates, but mortgage rates track expectations for where short-term rates are headed - and right now those expectations are flat to higher.

For anyone hoping a Fed cut would unlock a 5-handle mortgage rate, the timing just got pushed out again. With a solid jobs report and a hot CPI, the path to lower mortgage rates this year now runs through bad economic news, not Fed action.

Refinance demand has held up so far. But the math only gets attractive when current rates fall well below what borrowers already locked in, and most existing mortgages sit well under today's 6.36% rate.

Worth Noting

The Iran war is the single biggest variable in this story. If oil and energy costs keep pushing inflation higher, the Fed's next move could end up being a hike rather than a cut.

That would be the first rate hike since the post-COVID cycle ended.

If you want this kind of read on what's actually moving your money, join Market Briefs - the free daily plus a free 45-minute course on finding investments.

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