Federal Reserve
After mortgage rates reached as high as 8% in October 2023, the Federal Reserve paused on hiking the Fed funds rate and said it would cut interest rates three times in 2024. The timing of those cuts has changed from March to May, despite PCE inflation falling below the Fed’s 2% target over the last six months. Inflation levels and labor market dynamics continue to influence the Fed’s policy on rates, and we are keeping a close eye on those variables and how the Federal Reserve is reacting.
Latest Posts
The Fed is in no rush to cut rates amid inflation battle
Mar 06, 2024Chair Jerome Powell is scheduled to appear before the Senate Banking Committee on Thursday
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Mortgage rates hold steady ahead of jobs report
Mar 05, 2024 -
Mortgage rates are the highest they’ve been this year. Did loan officers expect this?
Mar 05, 2024 -
Mortgage rates flirt with 7% mark again
Feb 29, 2024 -
4 Success strategies for mortgage originators to thrive in 2024
Feb 26, 2024 -
Why is Fannie Mae optimistic about a housing market recovery?
Feb 23, 2024 -
CPI inflation report shows the Fed loves playing with fire
Feb 13, 2024 -
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