Home purchase applications fall, mortgage rates drop to lowest since September 2024

Source Cryptopolitan

The average US mortgage rate for a 30-year mortgage dropped to 6.25%, the lowest it’s been since September, according to a report from the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) on Wednesday.

The report says that for jumbo loans, which people use to buy pricier homes, the rate hit 6.32%, a level not seen since April 2023, said the report.

Not that the housing market is exactly partying over it.

The MBA’s purchase index actually fell 6.2%, seasonally adjusted. It’s holiday season, so things tend to dip, but still, lower rates didn’t push people to buy. Meanwhile, refinancing jumped by 7.4% on an adjusted basis.

The MBA’s weekly survey pulls data from mortgage bankers, thrifts, and commercial banks, and it covers over 75% of all U.S. retail residential mortgage applications. And while rates are easing, the reality is still tough: homebuyers are still dealing with heavy affordability problems.

Hiring came from services but manufacturing dropped again

December jobs data wasn’t thrilling, either. ADP says 41,000 private-sector jobs were added last month, a weak comeback from November’s 29,000 loss, a number that was actually revised up slightly from the earlier estimate of 32,000 lost. The new jobs didn’t meet the 48,000 forecast by Dow Jones, so once again, underperformance.

Nearly all the new jobs came from services. Education and health added 39,000, leisure and hospitality brought in 24,000, and trade, transportation, and utilities chipped in 11,000. Even financial services added 6,000.

That was the good part. Then came the losses: 29,000 jobs were cut from professional and business services, while information services shed 12,000. The goods-producing sector didn’t help either, with a total loss of 3,000, mostly because manufacturing jobs dropped by 5,000.

Firms with fewer than 500 workers carried the whole month.

Large employers barely showed up, adding just 2,000 jobs. Nela Richardson, chief economist at ADP, summed it up: “Small establishments recovered from November job losses with positive end-of-year hiring, even as large employers pulled back.”

Wages stayed flat while BLS prepares delayed data

Wages aren’t taking off either. People who kept their jobs saw their pay grow 4.4% from last year, same as November. Job switchers did a little better, getting an average boost of 6.6%, which is 0.3 percentage points higher than the previous month.

This ADP report lands right before the nonfarm payrolls data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). That’s the one Wall Street actually watches. It’s supposed to be the first on-time release in a while after delays caused by the government shutdown.

According to economists surveyed by Dow Jones, the BLS report is expected to show 73,000 new jobs added in December, up from 64,000 in November. The unemployment rate is expected to tick down to 4.5%.

If you're reading this, you’re already ahead. Stay there with our newsletter.

Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
placeholder
XRP Drops 5% After Being Hailed as 2026’s “Hottest Trade”XRP fell back to $2.18 after failing to hold above $2.28, cooling off an early-2026 rally that had been strong enough to earn the token the label of “new cryptocurrency darling” in a recent CNBC segment. The pullback underscores that even strong bullish narratives must contend with significant overhead supply at key technical resistance levels.
Author  Mitrade
11 hours ago
XRP fell back to $2.18 after failing to hold above $2.28, cooling off an early-2026 rally that had been strong enough to earn the token the label of “new cryptocurrency darling” in a recent CNBC segment. The pullback underscores that even strong bullish narratives must contend with significant overhead supply at key technical resistance levels.
placeholder
Oil Prices Rebound Amid U.S. Inventories Drop and Venezuela Supply Dynamics Oil prices saw a slight uptick as U.S. crude inventories fell 3.8 million barrels. Ongoing negotiations for Venezuelan oil sales further complicate market dynamics while analysts predict future oversupply concerns.
Author  Mitrade
16 hours ago
Oil prices saw a slight uptick as U.S. crude inventories fell 3.8 million barrels. Ongoing negotiations for Venezuelan oil sales further complicate market dynamics while analysts predict future oversupply concerns.
placeholder
Bitcoin Retreats to $92K After Sharp Sell-Off Triggers Over $440M in LiquidationsBitcoin’s strong start to 2026 was interrupted on Tuesday as a wave of selling erased much of its recent gains, triggering more than $440 million in leveraged position liquidations. Analysts view the pullback as a short-term hurdle in a broader recovery trend rather than a reversal.
Author  Mitrade
Yesterday 08: 19
Bitcoin’s strong start to 2026 was interrupted on Tuesday as a wave of selling erased much of its recent gains, triggering more than $440 million in leveraged position liquidations. Analysts view the pullback as a short-term hurdle in a broader recovery trend rather than a reversal.
placeholder
Newmont Goldcorp Faces Production Dip After Bushfire Disrupts Operations in Western Australia Newmont Goldcorp projects a 60,000-ounce decline in gold production for Q1 2026 due to a recent bushfire affecting its Boddington project in Western Australia. Operations have resumed at reduced capacity, with full restoration expected by February.
Author  Mitrade
Yesterday 02: 08
Newmont Goldcorp projects a 60,000-ounce decline in gold production for Q1 2026 due to a recent bushfire affecting its Boddington project in Western Australia. Operations have resumed at reduced capacity, with full restoration expected by February.
placeholder
Asian Markets Open 2026 with Record-Breaking Rally on Regional Strength, AI OptimismAsian equities have kicked off 2026 with their strongest start on record, outpacing the United States as investors shift capital toward the region’s tech sector, currencies, and corporate bonds amid attractive valuations and AI-driven growth prospects.
Author  Mitrade
Jan 06, Tue
Asian equities have kicked off 2026 with their strongest start on record, outpacing the United States as investors shift capital toward the region’s tech sector, currencies, and corporate bonds amid attractive valuations and AI-driven growth prospects.
goTop
quote