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
In July, job openings declined to pre-pandemic level
Aug 29, 2023U.S. job openings fell in July, declining to the early 2021 level, another sign the labor market is cooling.
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Single-family rent increases 3.3% year over year in June: CoreLogic
Aug 28, 2023 -
Housing sector is showing signs of picking back up: Powell
Aug 25, 2023 -
Home sales will be weak in 2024 regardless of “soft landing”: Fannie Mae
Aug 24, 2023 -
Mortgage rates continue to climb beyond 7%
Aug 24, 2023 -
Federal Reserve fines Regions Bank $2.95 million for ‘unsafe’ flood insurance program
Aug 23, 2023 -
Where are mortgage rates headed?
Aug 23, 2023 -
Mortgage demand sinks for fifth consecutive week
Aug 23, 2023 -
The first real test of mortgage rates: will they hit 8%?
Aug 17, 2023 -
Mortgage rates climb as US yields hit highest level since 2008
Aug 17, 2023 -
Mortgage applications fell another 0.8% last week
Aug 16, 2023 -
Mortgage rates rise again, but look poised to drop in the fall
Aug 10, 2023