Market Reaction Precedes Fed Action
The question of the day in the news is what will the Fed do at the next meeting? Unfortunately, there are misconceptions about what happens when the Fed cuts rates. The biggest misconception is when the Fed cuts rates, mortgage rates will improve.
Mortgage rates often move ahead of Fed decisions. With cut expectations building, the 30-year fixed mortgage rate has already dipped to around 6.59%, down from 6.9%, hitting the lowest levels seen in five months.
Similarly, some outlets report mortgage rates tumbling toward 11-month lows, near 6.48%, thanks to declining bond yields following weak jobs data.
Federal Funds Do Not Equal Mortgage Rates
It is important to understand that the Fed’s Benchmark rate mostly affects short-term borrowing, like credit cards and adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs). Fixed-rate mortgages are closely tied to long-term bond yields, particularly the 10-year Treasury yield. When investors expect inflation or economic weakness, those yields—and thus mortgage rates—can shift independently of Fed policy.
Limited Impact from a Modest Cut
Even a successful 25-basis-point cut, as expected, (bringing the Fed’s rate to 4.00–4.25%) may barely move mortgage rates. The mortgage market has already priced in anticipated cuts, softening the impact of Fed action. A more dramatic move may be needed to significantly reduce mortgage costs. If the Fed decides to cut the Benchmark rate by .50% and not .25%, the mortgage market may benefit.
The slower pace of inflation, and a slowing labor market will move mortgage rates lower. Not the anticipated .25% rate cut at the September meeting.
What This Means for Homebuyers and Homeowns
Final Thoughts