
Insights / Daily Rate Update — June 11, 2026
June 11, 2026
Daily Rate Update — June 11, 2026
Today's 10-Year Treasury yield is 4.53% and Freddie Mac's 30-year fixed PMMS is 6.48%. Below: the rate snapshot plus the three finance headlines moving the macro picture today.
Today's Rate Snapshot
- 10-Year Treasury Yield: 4.53% (as of 2026-06-09)
- 30-Year Fixed Mortgage (Freddie Mac PMMS): 6.48% (as of 2026-06-04)
Mortgage rates are not the same as the 10-Year Treasury yield, but they generally track its direction. Personal scenario rates can vary based on credit, LTV, occupancy, and product.
Today's Finance Headlines
War Headlines Cause Mid-Day Reversal
Mortgage News Daily · Mortgage Market
War Headlines Cause Mid-Day Reversal Bonds started the day inconsequentially weaker and picked up some gains after CPI came in a hair lower than expected at the core level. Just before noon, yields began rising and ultimately hit the 3pm close up a few bps versus yesterday. MBS were down about an eighth of a point, but it wasn't enough for the average lender to bother with a reprice. A forensic audit of the afternoon weakness leaves only one explanation: war headlines. Specifically, Trump said t
What this means for borrowers: Geopolitical instability is creating market volatility, offsetting the positive impact of lower-than-expected inflation data on bond yields and mortgage-backed securities.
Lenders should view UAD 3.6 as a reset opportunity
HousingWire · Industry
UAD 3.6 is not just a routine back-office update, but a fundamental shift in how appraisal data is structured, delivered and evaluated. By preparing early, forward-thinking lenders can use this transition as a strategic opportunity to audit their current workflows and eliminate long-standing inefficiencies.
What this means for borrowers: The update represents a fundamental shift in appraisal data standards, requiring lenders to modernize data structuring and internal workflow evaluations.
Mortgage Rates Remain Almost Perfectly Flat
Mortgage News Daily · Mortgage Market
There's been remarkably little change in mortgage rates so far this week. Monday saw a modest increase vs Friday, but since then, there's been essentially no change. Today's rates were technically 0.01% lower than yesterday's, but many lenders were perfectly unchanged. This is an acceptable result given the presence of high stakes economic data and ongoing war related headlines. The data in question was the Consumer Price Index (CPI), an inflation report that occasionally causes significant vola
What this means for borrowers: Mortgage rates are showing stability despite potential volatility from inflation data and geopolitical tensions.
The "What this means for borrowers" notes above are AI-generated and reviewed for compliance — they describe macro context, never make recommendations or forecasts. Not personal financial advice. Talk to Jesse Gonzalez, NMLS #278103, for your specific situation.