Rocket Companies Stock Falls As Rising Yields Pressure Mortgage Demand
BY Benzinga | TREASURY | 11:44 AM ESTRocket Companies Inc
- Rocket Companies
(RKT) stock is taking a hit today. Why is RKT stock falling?
Higher Yields Squeeze Rocket’s Mortgage Origination Profits
The 10-year Treasury yield briefly touched about 4.1% early Tuesday before easing back toward the 4.05% area ahead of noon ET, extending last week's volatility.
Rising yields are closely watched by RKT investors because 30-year mortgage rates tend to track the 10-year benchmark. When yields climb, funding costs for homebuyers and refinancers increase, typically cooling loan demand and pressuring originators' volumes and margins.
For Rocket, which earns fees when it originates and sells mortgages, a sharp backup in yields can squeeze profitability from both sides: fewer borrowers qualify or choose to lock in loans, and the value of existing mortgage-servicing and pipeline hedges can fluctuate, adding earnings volatility.
Higher long-term rates also reduce the present value investors assign to RKT's future cash flows, weighing on its valuation relative to high-growth fintech peers.
Treasury Yields React To Fed, Mideast Tensions
The move in yields came as traders reassessed the Federal Reserve's interest-rate path and tracked heightened geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, including ongoing clashes between the U.S., Israel and Iran and fresh security alerts at U.S. diplomatic posts in the region.
Those headlines added another layer of uncertainty for risk assets, keeping pressure on rate-sensitive names across the housing complex, from originators to homebuilders, through the morning session.
RKT Stock Trades Below Key Averages
Rocket Companies'
The recent drop has pulled the stock back toward its 200-day moving average, signaling a loss of upside momentum after a year of mostly trading above that long-term trend line.
- Key Resistance: $17.00
- Key Support: $14.00
</figure>
RKT Shares Drop 6% Tuesday Morning
RKT Price Action: Rocket Companies
Image: Shutterstock
Print
