Mortgage rates declined for the third consecutive week, offering a modest reprieve to a housing market long constrained by high prices and limited inventory.
The steady drop is beginning to weaken the so-called “lock-in effect.” That term describes homeowners’ reluctance to sell because they would forfeit their low-rate mortgages from previous years.
Many potential sellers had been waiting on the sidelines, unwilling to trade sub-3% or low-4% loans for current rates near 7%. That hesitation has choked the supply of existing homes for sale.
As rates inch lower, some of those homeowners are now reconsidering. The shift, though gradual, is starting to unlock a small portion of the market’s inventory.
Buyers who have been priced out or unable to find options are seeing a slight improvement in available listings. Greater supply could ease some of the upward pressure on home prices.
However, affordability remains a major hurdle. Even with lower rates, monthly payments are still significantly higher than they were just a few years ago.
The housing market remains in a delicate balance. Further rate declines could accelerate the thaw, but any sudden increase might reinforce the lock-in effect once again.





