If you’ve been watching the news lately, you might think now is the worst possible time to buy a home. War in the Middle East. Oil prices spiking. Mortgage rates bouncing around. Headlines screaming uncertainty.
Here’s what the headlines aren’t telling you: smart first-time buyers are quietly making their move right now — and for very good reasons.
The 30-year fixed mortgage rate climbed to 6.37% this week as the Iran conflict drives up oil prices and Treasury yields. That sounds scary — but it’s still roughly half a percentage point below where rates were this time last year. And here’s the part nobody is talking about: higher rates mean fewer competitors for the home you want.
How global conflict actually creates your buying window
Geopolitical instability has a complicated — and often favorable — effect on the U.S. housing market for buyers who understand how it works. Here’s the mechanism:
We don’t know how long the crisis in the Middle East will last, or what will happen. Yes, rates tend to drop in reaction to global instability, but that’s a tendency, not a certainty. During a time of conflict, it’s prudent to lock a mortgage rate when you’re quoted an acceptable one, rather than gambling for rates to drop even further.
— Holden Lewis, Home & Mortgage Expert, NerdWallet
Here are the current mortgage market numbers…
Every month a first-time buyer waits for “perfect” conditions, they pay rent that builds zero equity. At current prices and rates, a $320,000 home at 6.37% means roughly $1,990/month in principal + interest — likely close to or less than what you’re already paying in rent in many markets.
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