If you want to be notified when I write something new on The Mortgage Reports, sign up for free daily email alerts or subscribe to the free RSS feed.

Fed Fund Rate Increases As Long-Term Treasury Rates Drop

Posted on December 4, 2006
Filed under FOMC, Interest Rates
Read the complete post

Thanks for visiting The Mortgage Reports. To stay absolutely current on mortgage markets and important guideline changes, be sure to take my free daily email alerts.

Flash back to June 30, 2004.  The Fed Funds Rate was 1.000%.

June 30, 2004 was the date of the first of 17 consecutive increases to the Fed Fund Rate.  At the time, the 10-year treasury note was yielding 4.59%.

Today, with the FFR standing at 5.250%, the 10-year treasury is yielding 4.42% -- a drop of 17 basis points.

The FFR is the ultimate short-term interest rate; it's the cost to borrow money overnight, risk-free between banks.  The 10-year treasury, on the other hand, is longer-term.  In fact, it's like 10 consecutive years of overnight rates.  It's also considered to be risk-free.

Because the 10-year note is lower than the overnight rate, we can infer that markets believe the cost of overnight money will decrease over time, averaging 4.42% over 10 years.

Markets are already predicting with 60% probability that the FFR will be lower in March 2007 than it is today.


Dan Green is an active loan officer. Email or call 513-443-2020. Dan is on Twitter at @mortgagereports.

SEO Copywriting Made Simple
I use Scribe to improve my blog SEO

Live Rate Quotes

Required fields are marked with *