Bank of America’s mortgage-backed securities (MBS) research team tackled the question of when U.S. mortgage rates could come down. President Donald Trump has been pressuring the Federal Reserve for much of 2025 to cut interest rates, even as Fed chair Jerome Powell cites rising inflation related to tariff policy and macroeconomic uncertainty as a reason to be careful. But mortgage rates remain elevated above 6%, freezing activity in the housing market that enjoyed a tremendous boom during the pandemic thanks to sub-3% mortgage rates.
The MBS team wrote on Tuesday it “does see a path to a 5% mortgage rate” as long as the Fed pulls off two actions: quantitative easing (QE) in mortgage-backed securities and aggressive yield-curve control to the point that 10-year Treasury yields come down to 3.00%-3.25%. The 10-year is pivotal since it serves as a benchmark for 30-year fixed mortgage rates.
While Wall Street is rallying behind the possibility, even a drop to 5% likely won’t bring broad relief to American homebuyers facing the tightest affordability crunch in decades.
Lance Lambert, cofounder and editor-in-chief of ResiClub, told Fortune he sees one of two scenarios playing out. In a hypothetical scenario where the unemployment rate spiked and the economy weakened, he said financial markets “could respond with a flight to safety—driving up demand for Treasuries, which would push bond prices higher and yields (including mortgage rates) lower.”
In the case of a recession were to hit, Lambert said the Fed could respond with emergency cuts to the federal funds rate and, “if the downturn were severe enough, potentially resume purchases of mortgage-backed securities, adding further downward pressure on mortgage rates.”
The BofA note quantifies the challenge: Through recent cycles, even sharp rate cuts didn’t deliver broad affordability. After the September 2024 rate cut—the most recent analog—mortgage rates briefly dropped but then rebounded, with homebuilder valuations peaking and stocks declining by 20% or more in subsequent months. Rising Treasury yields and persistent supply constraints undermined any potential buyer relief.