Federal Reserve
The Federal Reserve started a rate-cutting cycle on Sept. 18, lowering its benchmark interest rate by 50 basis points (bps) to a range of 4.75% to 5%. The cut is the first since March 2020 after the Fed raised interest rates to a 23-year high point to cool the economy and quell inflation. However, mortgage rates rose following the Fed’s first cut, suggesting that the bond market had already factored in this anticipated action.
Latest Posts
CPI inflation report shows the Fed loves playing with fire
Feb 13, 2024I’ve been tracking data for a long time and have never seen this kind of divergence in the report.
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U.S. inflation hotter than expected in January
Feb 13, 2024 -
Why fewer homes are taking a price cut, even while inventory rises
Feb 10, 2024 -
Housing credit data in Q4 looks nothing like 2008
Feb 08, 2024 -
Mortgage rates show little movement as markets digest new economic data
Feb 08, 2024 -
Banks report tightened lending standards for nearly all residential mortgages: Fed survey
Feb 06, 2024 -
Mortgage rates surpass 7% for the first time since December
Feb 05, 2024 -
No Fed pivot in sight as Powell addresses rate cuts on 60 Minutes
Feb 05, 2024 -
U.S jobs report surprises to the upside
Feb 02, 2024 -
Mortgage rates decline after Fed pauses hikes once more
Feb 01, 2024 -
As the Fed plays waiting game to cut rates, housing pros lean toward incoming economic data
Jan 31, 2024 -
Federal Reserve holds interest rates steady for a fourth straight meeting
Jan 31, 2024