
The Federal Open Market Committee voted to leave the Fed Funds Rate unchanged today. It remains within a target range of 0.000-0.250 percent.
In its press release, the FOMC reiterated most of the key points from its December 2008 statement, including:
In addition, the FOMC addressed the "extremely tight" credit conditions for U.S. households and business, even as it said some financial markets are showing signs of improvement.
To the Fed, the latter is a precursor for the former. For Americans needing new mortgages or other forms of credit, it may mean that getting approved gets easier sometime late this year.
Most importantly, the Fed's press release again mentioned the policy-setting group's intention to "employ all available tools" to promote economic growth. This includes the open-market purchasing of mortgage-backed debt that has helped fuel the current Refi Boom. The Fed indicated a willingness to extend the program beyond the initial $500 billion, if necessary.
For each of the Fed's interventions, though, there is a trade-off.
Buying securities costs money and the Fed -- literally -- comes up with the cash by printing it. The extra supplies devalue the U.S. dollar which, if left unchecked, can cause the Fed's plan to backfire in the form of runaway money supply-led inflation. The Fed is aware of this risk and is pledged to monitoring it closely.
Overall, mortgage rates worsened today after the Fed's statement.
Source
Parsing the Fed Statement
The Wall Street Journal Online
January 28, 2009
http://online.wsj.com/internal/mdc/info-fedparse0928.html
The Federal Open Market Committee adjourns from its 2-day meeting today.
The monetary policy-setting group is expected leave the Fed Funds Rate within its current target range of 0.00-0.250 percent.
This is the lowest range for the Fed Funds Rate in history and, frankly, there isn't much room left to go lower. Therefore, markets aren't really concerned about what happens to the benchmark lending rate today.
Instead, markets will focus on the Fed's ideas to revive the U.S. economy.
In its post-FOMC press release last month, the Federal Reserve pledged to "employ all available tools" to get the economy moving in the right direction. At the time, some of those tools were already in play, including making direct loans to large companies and buying bad debts from commercial bank balance sheets.
And since that meeting, the Fed has put its money where its press release is.
Early this year, the Fed started a program to buy $500 billion in mortgage-backed debt and those ongoing purchases are part of what's keeping mortgage rates relatively low. The Fed has since made it easier for member banks to borrow money, too.
Each of these steps is meant to pour gas into the U.S. economic engine and the Fed is pledged to keep trying new approached until something works. And this is what mortgage markets will be concerned with today.
If the Fed's next stimulus plan is deemed ineffective or too costly for its own good, mortgage markets will likely sell off, causing mortgage rates to rise. The jump could be somewhat sudden because Fed announcements are often met with emotional, knee-jerk reactions.
By contrast, if the Fed's next steps are deemed on target, expect mortgage rates to fall only slightly. To some extent, this outcome is already priced into rates as of this morning.
The FOMC's official press release hits at 2:15 PM ET.
(Image courtesy: The New York Times)
Don't let the plunging median sales price fool you -- December's Existing Home Sales data has home sellers smiling.
Just one month after falling below the 5-million unit trend line, sales volume roared back by 300,000 homes in December, surprising housing analysts and making a case that this spring's Buying Season could be a competitive one.
Falling home prices helped fuel home sales. Nationally, the median sales price -- the point at which half of all homes sold for more and half sold for less -- was $175,400, down $32,000 from last year.
However, the most important part of December's Existing Home Sales report isn't making headlines.
At December's sales pace, it would now take 9.3 months to exhaust the existing home supply. Last month it was 11.2 months. This means that buyers are competing to purchase fewer homes which, in turn, puts upward pressure on home prices.
This is Supply and Demand at its most basic definition.
Economists have long said that the keystone of housing's recovery will be rebalancing in home supply. Coupled with the all-time low in housing starts, December's Existing Home Sales data signals future strength.
(Image courtesy: The New York Times)
After improving through 11 straight weeks, mortgage rates finally ticked higher last week. This, according to Freddie Mac's weekly mortgage rate survey. The Freddie Mac survey showed that mandatory mortgage fees rose last week, too.
Unfortunately, the bad news for rate shoppers doesn't stop there.
Because Freddie Mac's rate survey is conducted on Tuesday but its reports aren't released until Thursday, the published data doesn't even account for the previous 48 hours of activity in which rates and fees have risen further.
Versus last week, 30-year fixed, conforming mortgage rates are up 0.16% on average nationwide. On a $200,000 home loan, this equates to a roughly $20 extra per month, or $7,055 over the life of a 30-year loan.
The Era of Low Rates may not be over, but it may be time to get off the fence.
(Image courtesy: Freddie Mac)
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