Business
Mortgage rates fall to 6.37%: Freddie Mac
Real estate experts Dolly and Jenny Lenz unpack the newest real estate trends and the state of the housing market on ‘The Claman Countdown.’
Mortgage rates fell this week after President Donald Trump announced a two-week ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran, mortgage buyer Freddie Mac said Thursday.
Freddie Mac’s latest Primary Mortgage Market Survey, released Thursday, showed the average rate on the benchmark 30-year fixed mortgage declined to 6.37% from last week’s reading of 6.46%.
The average rate on a 30-year loan was 6.62% a year ago.

The average rate on the 30-year fixed mortgage fell to 6.37%, according to Freddie Mac. (Daniel Acker/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
“The decrease in rates represents a positive development for prospective homebuyers and could spark a more favorable spring homebuying season than last year,” said Sam Khater, Freddie Mac’s chief economist.
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The average rate on a 15-year fixed mortgage ticked lower to 5.74% from last week’s reading of 5.77%.
Mortgage rates are affected by several factors, including the Federal Reserve and geopolitics. Though mortgage rates are not directly affected by the Fed’s interest rate decisions, they closely track the 10-year Treasury yield. The 10-year yield hovered around 4.26% as of Thursday afternoon.
The decline in mortgage rates follows a two-week ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran, brokered with help from Pakistan, that was framed by the White House as a step toward broader negotiations. Defense officials said U.S. strikes on Iran had halted following Trump’s announcement Tuesday night.
“While the 10-year Treasury yield began to ease following the announcement of a two-week ceasefire, any relief to mortgage rates may prove short-lived – a temporary pause rather than a true turning point,” said Jiayi Xu, Realtor.com economist. “Until a more permanent resolution emerges, the fog of uncertainty is unlikely to fully lift from the housing market.”
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A real estate agent shows prospective buyers a new location. (Getty Images)
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Xu said rates could continue falling if the conflict in the Middle East moves closer toward a resolution.
“That timeline remains anyone’s guess,” she said. “In other words, mortgage rates don’t just affect monthly payments – they shape buyer confidence, seller motivation and the entire rhythm of the market, making every uptick a potential reason for hesitation during the season that matters most.”
Fox News’ Morgan Phillips contributed to this report.
Business
Economists Eye Possible May Increase to 4.35% Amid Sticky Inflation
SYDNEY — With the Reserve Bank of Australia’s cash rate sitting at 4.10 percent after back-to-back 25-basis-point hikes in February and March 2026, economists and financial markets are closely watching for signs of another increase as soon as the May 5 meeting, driven by persistent inflation pressures, a resilient domestic economy and global uncertainties from the Middle East conflict.

The RBA lifted the cash rate target by 25 basis points to 4.10 percent on March 17 in a narrowly split 5-4 board decision, marking the second consecutive tightening move this year. Governor Michele Bullock and the Monetary Policy Board cited stronger-than-expected capacity constraints, a tighter labor market and renewed upside risks to inflation, partly fueled by higher energy costs linked to regional tensions. While inflation has moderated from its 2022 peak, recent data showed it picking up materially, prompting the board to act to keep expectations anchored within the 2-3 percent target range.
As of early April, the big four banks and other forecasters largely anticipate at least one more hike in the near term. ANZ, Commonwealth Bank, NAB and Westpac all point to a possible 25-basis-point rise in May, which would lift the cash rate to 4.35 percent. Westpac has gone further in some scenarios, outlining potential additional moves in June and August that could push the peak toward 4.85 percent, though that remains a more aggressive outlook.
Market pricing reflected in ASX 30-day interbank futures as of April 9 showed the May 2026 contract implying roughly a 62 percent probability of a hike at the next meeting, with implied yields suggesting the cash rate could climb gradually through the second half of 2026 before stabilizing. Longer-dated contracts pointed to the rate holding around 4.6 percent by year-end under current pricing, though economists stress the path remains highly data-dependent.
The RBA’s own communications have emphasized flexibility. In the March statement, the board noted it would remain “attentive to the data and the evolving assessment of the outlook and risks.” Minutes from the meeting highlighted that while some inflationary pickup may prove temporary, underlying pressures in the economy — including robust private demand and government spending — warranted tighter policy to close the output gap.
Economists at UBS, for instance, forecast a May hike to 4.35 percent as the base case, followed by a prolonged hold unless household wealth and debt dynamics shift dramatically or global conditions deteriorate sharply. They highlighted booming household balance sheets and nominal government expenditure as factors that could sustain demand and keep inflation elevated.
Commonwealth Bank economists described the May decision as another “line ball” call, dependent on developments in the Middle East and how households respond to the recent tightenings. They retained their call for a May hike given current conditions but acknowledged the seven-week window allows for significant shifts in global or domestic data.
The broader 2026 outlook has shifted markedly since late 2025. Earlier forecasts anticipated rate cuts as inflation trended toward target, but stronger economic activity, lower unemployment than expected and external shocks have reversed that narrative. The RBA’s February Statement on Monetary Policy already revised inflation higher, with trimmed-mean measures now projected to peak around mid-2026 before easing gradually.
Key risks center on energy prices. The fragile ceasefire in the Middle East has kept oil volatile, with potential disruptions to supply adding to imported inflation risks for an open economy like Australia. Higher fuel and electricity costs flow through to households and businesses, complicating the RBA’s task of returning inflation sustainably to target without derailing growth.
Domestic factors also weigh heavily. The labor market has shown resilience, with unemployment lower than previously forecast and capacity pressures in some sectors proving more persistent. Wages growth, while moderating, remains a focus, as do rents and other services inflation that have been sticky.
For borrowers, another hike would translate to higher mortgage repayments on variable-rate loans, adding pressure after years of elevated borrowing costs. Savers, however, would benefit from improved returns on deposits. The RBA has stressed its dual mandate of price stability and full employment, signaling it will not hesitate to tighten further if risks to inflation skew higher.
Analysts note that three consecutive hikes — as seen in early 2023 — would be unusual but not unprecedented if data justifies it. The March decision’s split vote underscored internal debate over timing rather than the need for action itself, with some members favoring a hold to assess incoming figures.
Looking further into 2026, most forecasts do not envision aggressive further tightening beyond the near term. Many economists see the cash rate peaking around 4.35-4.60 percent before any potential easing in 2027, assuming inflation eventually moderates. Trading Economics models project the rate at 4.35 percent by the end of the current quarter, trending toward 4.10 percent in 2027 and lower still in 2028 under baseline scenarios.
Market participants and superannuation funds are monitoring the RBA’s next moves closely, as they influence everything from the Australian dollar to equity valuations and housing affordability. The cash rate directly affects variable mortgage rates, business lending costs and the broader cost of capital.
The RBA’s next meeting on May 5 will provide fresh guidance, with the quarterly Statement on Monetary Policy due in May offering updated forecasts. In the interim, key data releases on inflation, employment, retail sales and global oil dynamics will shape expectations.
Governor Bullock has repeatedly emphasized a data-dependent approach without pre-committing to any path. This flexibility has helped manage market volatility but leaves borrowers and businesses in a state of uncertainty as they plan budgets and investments.
For the Australian economy, sustained higher rates could cool demand and help bring inflation under control, but they also risk slowing growth if tightened too aggressively. Economists warn of a delicate balancing act, especially with external shocks from geopolitics adding unpredictability.
In summary, while no one can predict the exact trajectory with confidence, the consensus among major banks and analysts leans toward at least one more modest hike in May 2026, potentially taking the cash rate to 4.35 percent. Further moves later in the year remain possible but less certain, hinging on how inflation, the labor market and global conditions evolve.
Australians with mortgages are advised to review their finances and consider fixed-rate options where appropriate, while the RBA continues to stress that policy will adjust as needed to safeguard long-term economic stability.
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Amazon CEO Andy Jassy says company will rebuild shopping experience with AI
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Amazon is signaling a major shift in how it plans to serve customers, starting with rewriting parts of its own playbook.
CEO Andy Jassy released his annual letter to shareholders on Thursday, writing that the tech giant is not content to simply add artificial intelligence features to its existing retail business. Instead, Jassy said Amazon is preparing to rebuild the customer shopping experience from the ground up, even if it means disrupting products and systems that already work at massive scale.
“The temptation is to just add a little AI to the existing experience,” Jassy wrote, adding that the “trick” leaders must learn is “reimagining your experiences from a clean sheet of paper.”
“When you have a product that’s working at scale, one of the hardest decisions to make is to go back to the starting line,” Jassy wrote.

Amazon CEO Andy Jassy speaks during an Amazon Devices launch event in New York City on Feb. 26, 2025. (Brendan McDermid/File Photo / Reuters Photos)
Jassy suggested that “the interface with which customers want to interact with a retailer could be substantially different over time.”
The CEO acknowledged that rebuilding systems at scale can feel like “going backwards,” especially when those systems are already widely used.

In this photo illustration, the Amazon logo is displayed on a smartphone screen. (Jaque Silva/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)
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But he argued that standing still in a moment of rapid technological change is riskier.

In this photo illustration, a shopping cart is seen in front of the Amazon logo. (Jaque Silva/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)
“AI is not a standalone initiative—it’s a multiplier,” Jassy wrote. “It will reshape every customer experience we offer and unlock entirely new ones.”
| Ticker | Security | Last | Change | Change % |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AMZN | AMAZON COM INC | 233.65 | +12.40 | +5.60% |
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Jassy concluded his letter sharing his optimism for what lay ahead for the tech giant, underscoring Amazon’s strong finish to 2025, which saw revenue grow 12% year-over-year from $638 billion to $717 billion.
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