What Today’s Jobs Report Means for Mortgage Rates

Mortgage rates held steady after a mixed jobs report, with unemployment rising and job growth coming in stronger than expected. Learn what this means for homebuyers and what to watch next.
Nov 21, 2025

Today’s mortgage rate movement came down to one thing: the long-awaited jobs report. And while the numbers were mixed, the overall effect was simple — mortgage rates held steady instead of rising.

Here’s what happened and what it means if you’re thinking about buying or refinancing.


A Mixed Jobs Report: Why It Matters

This morning’s jobs report showed two things at the same time:

  • 119,000 new jobs were added — stronger than expected (forecast was 50,000)

  • Unemployment rose to 4.4% — a sign that the job market is cooling

  • Plus, the prior month’s data was revised downward

This combination created a “push-and-pull” effect:

  • More jobs = pressure for rates to rise

  • Higher unemployment = pressure for rates to fall

Those two forces balanced each other out, which helped mortgage rates remain roughly the same as yesterday.


Explained Like You’re in 5th Grade

Think of mortgage rates like a seesaw:

  • When the economy is strong, the seesaw tips UP and rates rise.

  • When the economy cools down, the seesaw tips DOWN and rates fall.

Today’s data pushed the seesaw in both directions at the same time — so it didn’t move much at all.

That's why rates stayed steady.


Why Rates Didn’t Rise — Even After Yesterday’s Pressure

Yesterday, mortgage lenders were already leaning toward raising rates because the bond market had weakened late in the day. Under normal circumstances, that would have pushed rates higher this morning.

But the jobs report helped cancel out that momentum, giving lenders room to keep today’s rates basically unchanged.

For homebuyers, that’s good news.


Stocks Also Played a Role

Another factor supporting rates today was a sell-off in the stock market, which often nudges investors toward safer assets like bonds. When bonds improve, mortgage rates typically benefit as well.

That helped keep today’s gains intact.


What Homebuyers Should Take Away

Right now, rates are still close to the better end of their recent range — even after the Fed meeting earlier this month caused volatility.

Key takeaways for buyers and homeowners:

  • Rates are steady, not rising.

  • Unemployment ticked higher, which the Fed watches closely.

  • Bond market reaction suggests no major rate spike for now.

  • Mixed data = a short-term window of stability.

Upcoming economic reports could shift momentum again, but for today, the market reaction was calm and even slightly positive.


Bottom Line

Today’s jobs report delivered just enough good and bad news to balance each other out — which kept mortgage rates from rising.

For buyers, this creates a small window of stability in a market that has been anything but predictable over the past few weeks.


Have questions or want to talk through your options?

Just fill out the contact form on this page or give me a call—I’m here to help.


Source: Mortgage News Daily

#mortgagerates
#average30yearfixed
#jobsreport
#unemploymentrate
#housingmarketupdate
#homebuyingtips
#mortgagenews
#economicupdate

PRIVACY POLICY

Customer service is very important to us. As we continue to improve and expand our services, we recognize our customers' need and desire to preserve their privacy and confidentiality. Safeguarding our customers' privacy is also very important to us. We have adopted standards that help maintain and preserve the confidentiality of customers' nonpublic personal information. The following Statement affirms our continued efforts to safeguard customer information.

Information We Collect

We gather nonpublic personal information about our customers as may be necessary to conduct business with our customers. We collect nonpublic personal information about you from the following sources:

  1. Information we receive from you on applications or other forms, over the telephone or in face-to-face meetings, and via the Internet. Examples of information we receive from you include your name, address, telephone number, social security number, credit history and other financial information.
  2. Information about your transactions with us or others. Examples of information relating to your transactions include payment histories, account balances and account activity.
  3. Information we receive from a consumer reporting agency. Examples of information from consumer reporting agencies include your credit score, credit reports and other information relating to your creditworthiness.
  4. From employers and others to verify information you have given to us. Examples of information provided by employers and others include verifications of employment, income or deposits.

Information We Disclose

Your personal information will only be retained for the purpose of providing you with our response to your query and will not be made available to any third party except as necessary to be disclosed to any related entity for the purpose intended or as required to be disclosed under law.

By submitting data on our website, the visitor is providing explicit consent to transmission of data collected on the website.

We treat data as confidential within our firm and require a strict adherence of all our employees to data protection and our confidentiality policies.

All visitors, however, should be aware that our website may contain links to other sites that are not governed by this or any other privacy statement.

We reserve the right to amend (that is, add to, delete or change) the terms of this Privacy Statement from time to time.