Federal Reserve
The Federal Reserve started a rate-cutting cycle on Sept. 18, 2025, lowering its benchmark interest rate by 50 basis points (bps) to a range of 4.75% to 5%. The cut was the first since March 2020 after the Fed raised interest rates to a 23-year high point to cool the economy and quell inflation. The Fed cut rates two more times in 2024, each by 25 basis points. It has not cut interest rates so far in 2025.
Latest Posts
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Option ARM Specialist First Fed: Severe Delinquencies Jump 115 Percent During Q1
Apr 25, 2008 -
Mortgage Rates Continue Upward Climb
Apr 24, 2008 -
Bank of America to Scale Back Mortgage Lending After Countrywide Merger
Apr 22, 2008 -
Fed’s Krozner: Mortgage Markets Need Greater Standardization
Apr 21, 2008 -
Fixed Mortgage Rates Hold Steady
Apr 17, 2008 -
Fed: Residential Housing ‘Anemic’
Apr 16, 2008 -
Feds Roll Out Dynamic Subprime, Alt-A Mortgage Maps
Apr 02, 2008 -
The Waiting Game: Jumbo Spreads Stay Wide
Apr 01, 2008 -
Paulson Changes the Game, Proposes Sweeping Financial and Mortgage Reform
Mar 31, 2008
