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President Donald Trump is fixated on interest rates. And he seems to think it’s going to help the housing market if he succeeds in pressuring the Fed to cut rates. At a cabinet meeting over the summer he said high interest rates are “the only problem with housing,” and that if he’s able to get a majority on the Fed board of governors and get interest rates down “housing is gonna swing and it’s gonna be great.”
If you listen to Marketplace regularly, you know that when the Fed cuts interest rates it doesn’t necessarily mean that mortgage rates come down. That’s because the interest rate the Fed sets is for short-term debt, and mortgages are long term, usually 15- or 30-year loans.
“Thirty-year mortgage rates tend to track very closely with the 10-year Treasury,” said Daryl Fairweather, chief economist at Redfin. She says most people who get a 30-year mortgage tend to either pay it off, refinance, or move within ten years. “So they tend to track really closely together,” said Fairweather. And one of the key factors that drives the yield on 10-year Treasury bonds is expectations about where inflation might be headed over the long term.
“The issue with the government intervening with the Federal Reserve's operations is that if the Federal Reserve were to start doing what the government wanted it to do, then investors would get really nervous about long-run inflation,” said Fairweather.
Just because the president wants lower interest rates doesn’t mean that lower interest rates would be good for the economy. Jorge Barro, an economist with the Texas Real Estate Research Center at Texas A&M University, says if investors do start to question the Fed’s independence and credibility and get nervous that inflation’s going to rise over the long-term, “I think it's likely, and there are historical studies that indicate, that that begins to impact financial markets. We start to see interest rates start to rise.” Especially on bonds and longer-term loans.
“It likely would make it a little bit harder to finance expenditures -- business loans, car loans, credit card loans,” said Barro. And mortgages, as inflation expectations get built into interest rates. |