What Happens to Mortgage Rates When the Government Shutdown Ends?
Published: November 12, 2025

What Happens to Mortgage Rates When the Government Shutdown Ends?
The longest government shutdown in U.S. history looks set to end in the coming days, bringing long-awaited clarity to financial markets that have been flying blind since October 1.
For more than six weeks, key government agencies haven’t released critical economic data, such as jobs reports and inflation readings, leaving the Federal Reserve and investors without their usual guideposts. As this data finally returns, we can expect market activity to pick back up and mortgage rates to start moving again.
When Will Economic Data Be Released?
The government shutdown delayed the release of several weekly & monthly economic reports essential to the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy, including the PCE and CPI inflation reports and the monthly BLS jobs report, which are typically the most impactful. When the shutdown ends, what happens to those reports? Let’s break it down.
Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation report:
- The September CPI report, originally scheduled for October 15, was released on October 24 as a requirement for Social Security cost-of-living adjustments. It showed core CPI increased by 0.3%.
- The October report was originally due on November 13th, but because that data hasn’t been collected yet, it will likely be delayed until December.
- The November report is due December 10th, and we could see the October print included.
Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) Jobs Report:
- The September BLS jobs report was initially scheduled to be released on October 3rd. The data for this report were collected before the shutdown began, so it’s likely to be released between November 17 and 21.
- As for the October jobs report, the BLS will need to survey companies and individual households. We likely won’t get this report until December.
- The November BLS report is currently scheduled for release on December 5. The BLS surveys businesses and households for its monthly reports starting the week containing the 12th day of the month. Given that the government will reopen on November 17th, the November jobs report may be delayed by a week.
Personal Consumption Expenditure (PCE) inflation report:
- It’s important to note that PCE is the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation report.
- September’s PCE report was initially scheduled to be released on October 31st. It’s likely to be delayed until late this month.
- The October PCE report, initially due November 26th, will likely be delayed until mid-to-late December.
How will rates move when this data is released?
So far this year, the average mortgage rate has dropped by a full percentage point. What’s driven this drop has been a steadily deteriorating jobs market as seen from the BLS data since May this year. The Fed specifically cited the labor market as the reason for the rate cuts we saw in September and October. Inflation also remains a concern and will need to either drop or stay under relative control in the PCE and CPI reports.
When these reports are released, we’ll likely see some market volatility. If the BLS labor data is weak and/or inflation doesn’t rise quickly, rates should go down. If the labor market shows signs of improvement or inflation starts to rise out of control, rates might rise.
How to navigate the rate market for the rest of 2025
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