Bankrate.com
Inflation is still running
well above plan, and that means the Federal Reserve is keeping its
finger firmly on the pause button. The central bank raised rates 11
times in 2022 and 2023, with the expectation that it would reverse
course this year. But as inflation has stayed above 3%, it is standing
pat. Following the Fed’s June 12 meeting, its fourth gathering of the
year, Chair Jerome Powell held steady again, announcing no change in
interest rates. The Fed also signaled that it’s likely to cut rates only
once this year, down from its previous estimate of three cuts.
“Mortgage
rates, which have remained higher for longer, will likely remain in the
high 6s until later this year,” says Lisa Sturtevant, chief economist
at Bright MLS, a large listing service in the mid-Atlantic region. “Some
homebuyers who have been sidelined by affordability challenges are
going to wait until rates come down to buy. Increasingly, home sellers
may have to do more negotiating to attract offers.”
Housing market
Earlier
in the inflationary cycle, the Fed had enacted increases of as much as
three-quarters of a point. Now that inflation is down to 3.3% — still
higher than its official target of 2%, but not terribly far off — that
round of tightening appears to be over. However, until inflation drops
down closer to that target, housing economists wonder when the
anticipated rate cuts will begin.
“We
still look for mortgage rates to drop to about 6.5% by the end of
2024,” says Mike Fratantoni, chief economist at the Mortgage Bankers
Association.
In an
effort to rein in inflation, the Fed boosted interest rates aggressively
in 2022 and 2023, including a single jump of three-quarters of a
percentage point. The hikes aimed to cool an economy that was on fire
after rebounding from the coronavirus recession of 2020. That dramatic
recovery has included a red-hot housing market characterized by
record-high home prices and microscopic levels of inventory.
Mortgage rates
The Federal Reserve does not set mortgage rates, and
the central bank’s decisions don’t move mortgages as directly as they
do other products, such as savings accounts and CD rates. Instead,
mortgage rates tend to move in lockstep with 10-year Treasury yields.
Still,
the Fed’s policies do set the overall tone for mortgage rates. Lenders
and investors closely watch the central bank, and the mortgage market’s
attempts to interpret the Fed’s actions affect how much you pay for your
home loan. The Fed bumped rates seven times in 2022, a year that saw
mortgage rates jump from 3.4% in January all the way to 7.12% in
October. In 2023, mortgage rates went higher still, briefly touching 8%.
There’s
no doubt that record-low mortgage rates helped fuel the housing boom of
2020 and 2021. Some think it was the single most important factor in
pushing the residential real estate market into overdrive.
When
mortgage rates surged higher than they had been in two decades, the
housing market slowed dramatically. And, while sales volume remains
slow, prices
are high. The nationwide median existing-home price for April was
$407,600, according to the National Association of Realtors — up 5.7%
year-over-year and perilously close to NAR’s alltime-high median price
of $413,800.
In the
long term, home prices and home sales tend to be resilient to rising
mortgage rates, housing economists say. That’s because individual life
events that prompt a home purchase — the birth of a child, marriage, a
job change — don’t always correspond conveniently with mortgage rate
cycles.
“The
combination of elevated mortgage rates and steep home-price growth over
the past few years has greatly reduced affordability,” Fratantoni says.
Next steps
Here are some pro tips for dealing with elevated mortgage rates:
>> Shop around for a mortgage: Savvy
shopping can help you find a betterthan-average rate. With the
refinance boom considerably slowed, lenders are eager for your business.
>> Be cautious about ARMs: Adjustable-rate
mortgages might look tempting, but Greg McBride, Bankrate’s chief
financial analyst, says borrowers should steer clear. “Don’t fall into
the trap of using an adjustable-rate mortgage as a crutch of
affordability,” he says. “There is little in the way of upfront savings,
an average of just one-half percentage point for the first five years,
but the risk of higher rates in future years looms large. New adjustable
mortgage products are structured to change every six months rather than
every 12 months, which had previously been the norm.”
>> Consider a home equity loan: While
mortgage refinancing is on the wane, many homeowners are turning to
home equity lines of credit — HELOCs — to tap into their home equity.
The rationale is simple: If you need $50,000 for a kitchen renovation
and you have a mortgage for $300,000 at 3%, you probably don’t want to
take out a new loan at 7%. Better to keep the 3% rate on the mortgage
and take a HELOC — even if it costs 10%.