Mortgage rates eased up a bit this week, as markets are no longer panicking at each new development — or social media post — related to the Iran war. The conflict is still exerting a huge influence on rates, though lately the daily ups and downs have mostly canceled each other out.
The average rate on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage fell eight basis points to 6.37% APR in the week ending June 5, according to rates provided to NerdWallet by Zillow. (A basis point is one one-hundredth of a percentage point.) We calculate our weekly average using daily APRs recorded over the past five business days.
🤓 Kate On Rates: June 5, 2026
The big news for April was job openings, which blew past predictions and reached the highest level since May 2024. Looking past the 7.6 million open positions, though, the JOLTS data looked a little shakier. Actual hires dropped, as did separations (folks leaving jobs for whatever reason). While fewer layoffs certainly sounds good, a lower quit rate isn’t the best: Reluctance to leave a job doesn’t signal a ton of faith in the labor market.
But Wednesday’s data from payroll administration firm ADP showed glimmers of hope that those April job openings blossomed into May hires. The ADP National Employment Report uses the company’s payroll data, which covers an extensive swath of privately employed workers in the U.S. The report gained prominence during last fall’s government shutdown, when for a while private industry data was the only available option.
The ADP data beat expectations for the number of new hires, and continued to show widespread gains. Though still strongest in healthcare and services, May hires increased in eight of the 10 sectors ADP covers.
This morning, we got the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Employment Situation Summary for May. Better known as the jobs report, this data provides key information like the U.S. unemployment rate. In terms of the data released this week, you can think of JOLTS and ADP as the previews and the jobs report as the feature presentation.
And the jobs report did not disappoint, with the number of May hires well over market predictions. Unemployment was flat, as expected. “It’s getting more difficult to cast aside strength revealed in the jobs report data,” says Elizabeth Renter, NerdWallet senior economist. “The last three months have been stronger than anticipated, and the numbers keep getting revised upwards. This bodes well for overall economic growth and resilience.”
Okay, so all in all the job market looks pretty decent. What does that have to do with mortgage interest rates?
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The Fed and mortgage rates
In the case of mortgage rates, what markets expect the Fed to do often affects mortgage rates more than the Fed’s actual actions. By the time the central bankers meet and announce a hike or cut, mortgage lenders have often already priced in the Fed’s predicted move. Signals that the Federal Reserve is shifting into cutting mode tend to push mortgage rates lower; if it looks like rate hikes are on the table, that generally puts upward pressure on mortgage rates.
All of this is happening as a new chair is taking the reins at the Federal Reserve. Kevin Warsh began his term just two weeks ago. During his confirmation hearing Warsh repeatedly emphasized that he would not be beholden to President Trump’s wishes for lower rates. (The president has relentlessly requested lower rates since the beginning of his second term, maligning Warsh’s predecessor Jerome Powell at seemingly every turn.)
Warsh has seemed to favor lowering the funds rate, though he has his own rationale. He believes that artificial intelligence (AI) will allow businesses to dramatically increase productivity without raising costs. That means the economy would be growing without inflation accelerating, making it safe to lower rates.
A weakening job market would make it easier to argue for cutting rates to support it. But with employment looking strong at the same time that inflation keeps accelerating, markets are already betting on the Fed raising the funds rate as early as its September meeting. Mortgage rates won’t make a serious move until a rate hike is virtually certain, but in the meantime this backdrop could limit how much mortgage interest rates are able to fall.
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