Mortgage rates moved ever so slightly higher last week, but it was enough to take a little heat out of what had been a briefly red hot refinance market.
Read Also
- Britain’s Starmer in Brussels for talks on EU reset
- Long water and power outages from Helene test patience in the Carolinas and Georgia
- As Middle East tensions flare, Canadian police brace for potential unrest
- UN chief urges end to ‘tit for tat’ Middle East violence after Iran attack on Israel
- Hand grenades thrown near Israeli embassy in Copenhagen
- 4 Russian journalists accused of working for a Navalny group go on trial in Moscow
- Don Jr gets into post-debate spat with CNN’s Kaitlan Collins over ‘Hitler’ comments
- Canadians will soon receive GST/HST credit payments. How much?
- IVF clinic mix up reveals father isn’t related to daughter after wrong embryo implanted
- Hurricanes like Helene are deadly when they strike and keep killing for years to come
Latest CNBC
- Tesla stock slips after EV maker misses estimates on deliveries
- Tesla stock slips after EV maker misses estimates on deliveries
- As Netanyahu vows Iran payback, markets watch for dangers of further escalation
- Red hot refinance demand retreats after tiny bump higher in mortgage rates
- Mining giant Fortescue says it's time to walk away from the 'proven fantasy' of net zero
- Goldman-backed Starling Bank hit with $38.5 million fine for financial crime prevention failures
- Facebook owner Meta forms data-sharing pact with UK banks to counter scams
- European markets open slightly higher as investors look beyond Middle East tensions
- Yale's Stephen Roach: Markets are in danger of being 'whipsawed' by Middle East conflict, U.S. unemployment
- Ireland reveals how it plans to spend ‘transformational’ $14 billion Apple tax windfall