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Science experiments can be excellent metaphors at times.
Thursday, shortly after the markets closed, the Federal Reserve announced a 25 basis point increase to the Discount Rate. The Discount Rate is now 0.750%. Mortgage markets are selling off on the news.
The Era of Low Mortgage Rates may be officially over.
For some context, it's important to understand what the Fed's Discount Rate is and, more specifically, what it isn't.
The Discount Rate is the interest rate that the Federal Reserve charges to banks when banks borrow money from it. Banks typically borrow money from the Fed to beef up their cash reserves because all banks are required to keep as minimum level of cash-on-hand.
The Discount Rate is not the rate at which banks borrow money from each other -- that's the Fed Funds Rate. Nor is the Discount Rate the benchmark rate at which banks lend money to consumers and businesses -- that's Prime Rate.
Discount Rate is just one of the Fed's many tools to slow or speed the economy and, as of yesterday, it's taking steps to slow growth down. Or, at least, push some responsibility back to banks. There's no direct impact on consumers for a move like this, but it's the indirect impact we need to worry about.
In raising the Discount Rate, the Fed implies that the U.S. is strong enough to withstand a shock. It's the signal for which Wall Street has been waiting.
See, since late-2008, 30-year fixed mortgage rates have moved within a very tight range. With few exceptions, never more than 5.375% and never less than 4.875%. This was because the bond markets harbored doubt about whether the "green shoots" of the economy were for real. Yesterday, the Fed answered that "Are We?" and "Aren't We?" question.
Clearly, we are. And that brings us to the science experiment.
Much like a super-saturated solution, the mortgage-backed bond market has been in precarious balance, one crystal away from complete transformation. Well, Thursday, February 18, 2010, the Fed introduced that crystal. Loan officers everywhere will forever remember yesterday as the Last Day of Low Mortgage Rates.
The Federal Reserve won't make policy changes over the next few weeks, months, or maybe even quarters, but the damage is done. Bond markets are played 12-18 months into the future and the Fed's move to raise the Discount Rate has traders to change their expectations what's coming down the pipe.
Mortgage rates will rise in response.
If you're in the process of shopping for a mortgage or buying a home, the longer you wait to commit, the higher your mortgage rate will likely be. Call orand I will send you a rate quote based on what the market is doing today.
Rates are changing very quickly and every day counts.
Dan Green (NMLS #227607) is an active loan officer with Waterstone Mortgage. Email Dan ator call 513-443-2020.
Bonus: Click to get a free, no-obligation rate quote. I love to work with my readers!
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