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The 30-year fixed mortgage rate climbed to 6.22% as of March 19, 2026, a three-month high last seen in December of 2025, as the 10-year Treasury yield rose to 4.3% amid broader market unease. Rates had bottomed at 5.98% in late February before climbing steadily through March. The spring housing market is feeling the pressure. But for a select group of companies, higher rates are quietly working in their favor. Here are five stocks positioned to benefit most.
Five Companies Positioned for the High-Rate Environment
Rocket Companies (NYSE: RKT) has emerged as the most comprehensive play on elevated mortgage rates following its transformational $14.2 billion acquisition of Mr. Cooper in late 2025. Rocket now benefits from a “natural hedge”: while high rates dampen new loan volume, they maximize the value of its servicing portfolio. In this environment, homeowners are less likely to refinance, allowing loans to remain on the books longer and generate steady fee income. As of the close of Q4 2025, Rocket’s combined servicing portfolio reached a massive $2.1 trillion in unpaid principal balance, representing approximately one in every six mortgages in the United States and generating roughly $5 billion in annualized recurring cash flow.
JPMorgan Chase (NYSE: JPM) and Wells Fargo (NYSE: WFC) are the big-bank plays. Both of them earn more net interest income (NII) when rates are higher, paying depositors less than they earn on loans and securities. Wells Fargo guided for approximately $50 billion in NII excluding markets in 2026, up from $46.7 billion in 2025. JPMorgan reported NII up 7%, driven by higher deposit balances in Q4 2025. Neither is a pure mortgage play, but both benefit across their entire balance sheets.
The apartment real estate investment trusts (REITs) round out the group. AvalonBay Communities (NYSE: AVB) and Essex Property Trust (NYSE: ESS) benefit indirectly: when buying a home costs too much, people keep renting. AvalonBay’s CEO noted it is “over $2,000 per month more expensive to own a home” in their core markets given current mortgage rates and home prices. While REITs face higher borrowing costs themselves, the boost in rental demand (due to poor home affordability) often outweighs the interest expense, especially for companies with strong balance sheets.
How Each Business Is Positioned
The Rocket Companies model is most directly tied to the rate environment. High rates slow prepayments, extending the life of its mortgage servicing rights (MSRs) and attached cash flows. Following the acquisition of Mr. Cooper, Rocket’s combined servicing portfolio surged to $2.1 trillion in unpaid principal balance across 9.5 million clients. This massive scale now generates approximately $5 billion in annualized recurring cash flow, providing a robust capital base as the company targets a return to consistent double-digit equity growth in 2026.
Among the apartment REITs, Essex and AvalonBay show stronger near-term fundamentals. Essex posted same-property revenue growth of 3.8% year-over-year in Q4 with financial occupancy of 96.3%. Supply in Essex’s West Coast markets is declining, with units across Essex markets falling from 52,400 in 2025 to 42,300 in 2026. AvalonBay reported same-store residential occupancy of 95.8% and guided for 2026 core funds from operations of $11.00 to $11.50 per share.
What Management Is Saying
Rocket CEO Varun Krishna: “This is the power of an integrated homeownership ecosystem—massive top of funnel, scaled origination-servicing recapture, expansive distribution for industry professionals and a technologically advanced foundation for infinite capacity—built for the AI era.”
Wells Fargo CEO Charlie Scharf: “We are excited to now compete on a level playing field and are able to dedicate even more resources to growth with the ability to grow our balance sheet.” The Federal Reserve’s removal of Wells Fargo’s asset cap adds a meaningful growth lever beyond rate sensitivity alone.
AvalonBay CEO Benjamin Schall: “Given the challenges of getting entitlements and how lengthy the process is in our established regions, we expect this supply backdrop to serve as a tailwind for us for the foreseeable future.”
Who Actually Benefits Most
Mortgage rates at a three-month high create a clear hierarchy of winners. Rocket Companies is the clearest winner. By acquiring the world’s largest servicer, Rocket has transformed its business model and now controls a massive $2.1 trillion servicing portfolio. No other company in this group has that level of direct, concentrated exposure to the rate dynamic at play right now.
Essex and AvalonBay are the most compelling indirect beneficiaries, carrying strong occupancy, improving supply backdrops, and markets where the rent-versus-own math heavily favors renting. JPMorgan and Wells Fargo benefit through NII expansion, but mortgage is a small slice of their diversified businesses.
Watch the 10-year Treasury yield and what prediction markets say about the chance rates hit 6.30% by year-end as the key signals for how long this environment persists.

