Posts Tagged ‘The Fed’

Mortgage that Matters: COULD RATES ACTUALLY GO LOWER?

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The past several months seem to prove that you shouldn’t always trust conventional wisdom. Most recently, conventional wisdom was that in March, the Federal Reserve would have finished buying the $1.25 trillion in mortgage backed securities they were authorized to purchase, and when this heavy buying activity ended, mortgage rates would shoot up in April, May and June.

It was simple economics. If the Fed was in there every day buying up mortgage securities, this heavy buying would drive MBS prices up and rates would go down.

This did work, and the low rates were precisely what the Administration hoped would happen to get the housing market back on its feet.

The 800 pound gorilla was the fear of what would happen when all this buying activity by the Fed ended.

Basic economics would seem to indicate that rates would have gone up and perhaps significantly.

Even worse was what would happen when the Fed started selling these securities. If they were to dump even a few billion a day, the constant selling would drive MBS prices down and mortgage rates up.

Almost everyone predicted this scenario, and many housing economists thought it would be devastating to the housing markets.

But in an economy with so many moving parts, things often turn out differently than expected.

Rates not only didn’t go up, they’ve actually gone down, and this has huge implications.

With rates dropping toward 4.5%, we are seeing a whole new wave of refinancing, and many of these loans being refinanced are in mortgage securities owned by the Fed! As a result, this $1.25 trillion in MBS the Fed owns is gradually being paid off on its own. And the more people re-finance, the more will be paid down.

The implications of this are huge. If the $1.25 trillion pays down through refinance activity to, say, $750 billion, that could open up the Fed to buying another $500 billion to get back to the $1.25 trillion number.

If you think about it, a new round of Fed buying, as they replenish their holdings, could drive rates to a level no one could have ever dreamed of.

As hard as it is to imagine rates being as low as 4.5%, a new round of Fed purchases could drive rates to 4.0% or even lower.

As Yogi Berra once said, “Who’d have ever thunk it?”

Indeed.


What the heck is the Fed up to?

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The Federal Reserve Board may be the least understood institution in America and about which people know the least.  But in these trying times, their role has not only been big.  It’s been critical.  The Fed has probably done more to get the economy moving again than all the government spending and bailout programs combined.

 About 85% of all mortgages made today are being put into mortgage backed securities. These securities are being created primary by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Both of which are now 80% owned by the government.  In past, these securities were bought by banks, mutual funds, insurance companies and pension funds.  These same investors are still buying, but in general, they are buying a whole lot less than they did before the credit crunch of 2008-09.

In order to drive rates lower, the Fed has stepped in and been buying massive amounts of mortgage securities.  As a matter of simple supply and demand, massive buying will drive bond prices up, and as bonds prices rise, rates drop.  Thus, the Fed made a conscious decision to buy mortgage securities to drive mortgages rates downward, largely to keep pressure off the American homebuyers and to stimulate housing markets in general.

 The Fed has stepped in as the buyer of last resort, and they are now authorized to buy up to $1.2 trillion in these MBS’s.  They’ve already bought $975 billion, with $225 billion more to be bought.

 They have been buying at a rate of $25 billion a week; just enough to keep rates relatively low, allowing people to refinance at lower rates and for homebuyers to afford new homes.