The 10-Year Treasury Is Rising — What That Means for Investors Refinancing Soon

This week the 10-year Treasury yield moved higher, driven by global uncertainty and market reactions to geopolitical tensions.

For real estate investors, that matters more than headlines.

Because mortgage rates — especially investor loans like DSCR — tend to move with the 10-year Treasury.

When the 10-year rises, borrowing costs usually follow.


Why the 10-Year Matters

The 10-year Treasury acts as the benchmark for many types of long-term financing.

When yields increase:

  • Mortgage rates rise

  • Investor loan pricing adjusts

  • Refinance opportunities tighten

Recently, some analysts have suggested the 10-year could trend toward 4.5% if uncertainty continues in global markets.

No one can predict exactly where it will land — but the direction matters.


What This Means for Investors

If you have a loan maturing soon or a balloon payment coming up, this is something to pay attention to.

You essentially have two options:

Option 1: Refinance Now

Lock in today’s rates and remove uncertainty.

Pros:

  • Protect against further rate increases

  • Stabilize cash flow

  • Improve planning certainty

Cons:

  • If rates fall later, you may refinance again.


Option 2: Wait and See

Some investors prefer to wait for geopolitical tensions to cool and markets to stabilize.

Pros:

  • Potentially better rates later

  • More clarity in the market

Cons:

  • If the 10-year continues rising, refinancing could become more expensive.


A Practical Approach

Many experienced investors take a balanced approach:

  • Refinance if the numbers work today

  • Choose structures that provide flexibility

  • Plan for the possibility of refinancing again later if markets improve

Real estate isn’t about perfectly timing interest rates — it’s about managing risk.


DSCR Options That Help

If refinancing today is tight, structuring can help:

10-year Interest-Only options to improve DSCR
Strategic rate buydowns to improve qualification
30-year or 40-year DSCR structures to manage payments

Sometimes small adjustments in structure make a refinance much more comfortable.


The Bottom Line

No one knows exactly where the 10-year Treasury will go.

But if you have a loan maturing soon, it’s worth asking the question now:

Do the numbers make sense to refinance today — or are you comfortable waiting?

If you want to see the difference between refinancing now versus waiting, we can run the numbers side-by-side.

Call 718-635-2377 or email george@loanfunders.com.

Let’s make the decision based on math — not headlines.