Mortgage Dip, Community Bank Fixes Could Ease Small Town Finances

For rural borrowers, freeing up community-bank balance sheets could mean steadier home loans, operating lines, and ag real-estate financing as winter planning ramps up.

bank phoner.jpg

Market Day Report

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (RFD-TV) — Cheaper mortgages and a potential capital-rule tweak could ease credit in small towns.

Thirty-year fixed rates ticked down to 6.30 percent (from 6.34 percent a week ago; 6.32 percent on the year) and 15-year rates to 5.53 percent (5.55 percent last week; 5.41 percent a year ago), per Freddie Mac — helpful for farm families buying homes, refinancing, or shifting equity.

Meanwhile, in Washington, community bankers met with regulators as the Treasury and the FDIC moved to review the Community Bank Leverage Ratio (CBLR).

Rural lenders say a fix to the CBLR could unlock more credit for farms, small businesses, and hometown projects. Congress created the CBLR in 2018 as a simple, optional capital test, but regulators set it at 9 percent and layered on big-bank definitions, limiting who can use it.

Farm-Level Takeaway: Slightly lower rates help at the margin; bigger wins come if CBLR reforms unlock more Main Street ag credit.

Fix CBLR To Free Rural Bank Lending Capacity

Speaking at the Federal Reserve’s Community Bank Conference, Fed Governor Michelle Bowman called the rule “well-intentioned” but underperforming, noting only about 40 percent of eligible community banks opted in — far fewer among institutions over $1 billion.

For ag communities, that means more capital tied up on paper and fewer dollars available for operating lines, land notes, equipment, and grain storage.

Bowman noted fewer than half of eligible banks use the optional rule, and lenders say the 9-percent threshold and lingering big-bank definitions keep them on the sidelines.

According to the American Bankers Association, industry advocates argue regulators can fix this without new legislation: lower the threshold to 8 percent (still well-capitalized), raise and index the $10 billion size cap so more true community banks qualify, and stop penalizing banks for holding safe assets like cash and Treasuries in leverage calculations. Those targeted changes would expand participation and give rural banks more room to lend—without weakening safety and soundness.

ABA leaders, including Vice Chair Cathy Owen and board member Tom Fraser, argued for practical fixes: calibrate CBLR at 8%, simplify capital definitions, and avoid double-asking for risk-weighting when banks opt into CBLR.

For rural borrowers, freeing up community-bank balance sheets could mean steadier home loans, operating lines, and ag real-estate financing as winter planning ramps up.

Farm-Level Takeaway: A right-sized CBLR would free community bank balance sheets and support more affordable, timely ag credit on Main Street.

Related Stories
From projected drops in input costs to biofuel expansion and the USDA’s new “One Farmer, One File” initiative, Ag Secretary Brooke Rollins shared key policy priorities at Commodity Classic that put farm issues back in the spotlight.
NCBA Chief Counsel Mary-Thomas Hart discussed the legal process behind delisting the prairie chicken, the challenges ranchers faced under the bird’s previous protections, and the benefits of cooperative habitat management for both livestock and wildlife.
Liquidity management and cost control will matter most in 2026.
USDA headquarters downsizing reflects cost pressures and may reshape agency operations.
Farm CPA Paul Neiffer provided insight on updated PLC rate estimates, the role of base acres, and the upcoming enrollment window for ARC and PLC programs.
Farm Bureau economist Danny Munch explains the importance of timely enrollment, and how the program helps dairy producers safeguard their operations against volatile milk markets.

Tony St. James joined the RFD-TV talent team in August 2024, bringing a wealth of experience and a fresh perspective to RFD-TV and Rural Radio Channel 147 Sirius XM. In addition to his role as Market Specialist (collaborating with Scott “The Cow Guy” Shellady to provide radio and TV audiences with the latest updates on ag commodity markets), he hosts “Rural America Live” and serves as talent for trade shows.

LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

At the White House’s “Celebration of Agriculture,” the Trump Administration announced a slate of policies to support farmers and ranchers, including biofuel mandates, SBA loan programs, and new labeling policies to boost domestic markets for ag products.
Expanded access could boost demand for U.S. exports.
Margins shift across the chain based on timing.
Exports depend more on demand than currency shifts.
Spring Fieldwork Advances As Weather Patterns Shift Nationwide
This week on Champions of Rural America, Congressman Nick Begich discusses the lease sale, its economic impact, and what it could mean for future energy production in Alaska.