Mortgage refinance demand jumped 40% higher last week after President Trump ordered a $200 billion bond-buying spree – briefly sending mortgage rates below 6% for the first time in years.

Refinance demand was 128% higher than the same week one year ago as homeowners rushed to take advantage of sinking 30-year fixed mortgage rates, which fell to 5.87% on Monday. 

“I am instructing my Representatives to BUY $200 BILLION DOLLARS IN MORTGAGE BONDS,” Trump wrote in a Jan. 8 post on Truth Social.

President Trump last week ordered a $200 billion bond-buying spree.

“This will drive Mortgage Rates DOWN, monthly payments DOWN, and make the cost of owning a home more affordable.”

Mortgage rates typically move very slowly, only inching down by hundredths of a percentage point a day – but they plummeted after Trump’s social media post.

Later that day, Federal Housing Finance Authority Director Bill Pulte said in a post on X that “Fannie [Mae] and Freddie [Mac] are the entities that will do the purchases.”

He also told reporters on Jan. 9: “We put in a $3 billion buy already.”

Total mortgage application volume soared 28.5% last week from the previous week, which was adjusted for the holiday, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association’s index.

Applications for a mortgage to purchase a home also rose 16% for the week and were 13% higher than the same week a year earlier, likely due to people returning after the holidays.

Mortgage rates have since bounced back above 6% as analysts anticipate higher oil prices. 

Mortgage refinance demand last week was 128% higher than the same week one year ago.

The rate on a 30-year fixed mortgage hit 6.10% on Wednesday, according to the Mortgage Research Center. The average 15-year fixed mortgage rate was 5.25% and a 30-year jumbo mortgage was 6.70%.

The massive bond-buying spree proposed by Trump would give lenders more money to lend to homebuyers – creating a higher supply of cash that allows interest rates to fall.

UBS analysts estimated the latest round of bond purchases could help push 30-year fixed mortgage rates down more than a fifth of a percent.

But the average rate of outstanding US residential mortgages is 4.4%, far below the rate for a new mortgage, so homeowners are incentivized to hold onto their properties.

Trump’s proposal would also only account for about 1.4% of the roughly $14.5 trillion mortgage market, according to JPMorgan Chase analysts.

“Similar to our view on President Trump’s post regarding a ban on institutional investors buying homes, we do not believe this initiative will have any significant impact on the housing market,” the analysts wrote in a note last week.

Total mortgage application volume soared 28.5% last week from the previous week, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association’s index.

Trump also announced last week that he was taking steps to ban large investors from buying and then renting out single-family homes in an effort to lower the cost of homeownership.

Large investors and private-equity firms have bought up hundreds of thousands of single-family homes over the past decade. But the impact of Trump’s proposal has been scrutinized.

Firms that own 100 or more single-family homes only control about 2% of the nation’s single-family housing stock, according to John Burns Research and Consulting.

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