Global Markets
US-Iran Conflict Spillover: Mortgage Rates Rise on Geopolitical Tensions
724FinanceDr. Yaman Ege
The collapse of the US-Iran ceasefire has pushed mortgage rates higher, with the 30-year fixed mortgage rate climbing to 6.49% according to Freddie Mac data. This reflects how geopolitical uncertainty directly influences borrowing costs through rising bond yields and oil prices.
Geopolitical Tensions and Credit Dynamics
Credit Product Analysis
Markets are viewing this as a double-edged sword: geopolitical risks are inflating risk premiums in energy and pension funds, while also deepening pressure on consumer credit. Companies like TSMC continue to grapple with supply chain cost hikes stemming from regional conflicts. Similarly, ASML is ramping up strategic investments to minimize delays in semiconductor equipment production amid global instability. For tech stocks like Nvidia, the tight credit environment adds indirect strain. Thus, the persistent rigidity in credit markets could further weigh on technology equities.