{"id":4931,"date":"2023-12-16T21:18:23","date_gmt":"2023-12-16T21:18:23","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/frankbuysphilly.com\/the-federal-reserve-delivers-lower-rates-for-christmas\/"},"modified":"2023-12-16T21:18:23","modified_gmt":"2023-12-16T21:18:23","slug":"the-federal-reserve-delivers-lower-rates-for-christmas","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/frankbuysphilly.com\/the-federal-reserve-delivers-lower-rates-for-christmas\/","title":{"rendered":"The Federal Reserve delivers lower rates for Christmas"},"content":{"rendered":"


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The Federal Reserve<\/strong> played the good grinch for Christmas this year and delivered the best gift for homebuyers nationwide, leading to lower mortgage rates. The 10-year yield and mortgage rates fell together after the Fed meetings, which gave us mortgage rates<\/a> under 7% last week.<\/p>\n

Mortgage rates and the 10-year yield<\/h2>\n

What a crazy week! Not too long ago, on jobs Friday, I was on the HousingWire Daily podcast<\/a> saying it\u2019s time to declare war on the Federal Reserve for being too restrictive; you can listen to the podcast here<\/a>. A few days later, the Fed corrected its mistake \u2014 they didn\u2019t go hawkish but instead made doves cry and bond yields acted correctly, sending the 10-year yield below 4% and mortgage rates under 7%. <\/p>\n

Right after the Fed presser I did another podcast<\/a> where I outlined why this was so positive for the U.S. economy. You can see it in the stats from last week, where the 10-year yield fell from 4.25%<\/strong> to end the week at 3.91%<\/strong>. Mortgage rates went from 7.10%<\/strong> to 6.62%<\/strong> and ended the week at 6.64%<\/strong>.<\/p>\n

As I have said before, given the history of economic cycles, when the market believes the Fed rate-hike cycle is over, bond yields will rally and mortgage rates will fall. We have had an almost 1.5%<\/strong> move lower in mortgage rates without one rate cut happening, and that looks normal to me. We shall see if we can hold those gains next week.<\/p>\n

Purchase application data<\/h2>\n

Even before mortgage rates dropped below 7.25%<\/strong>, we saw a positive move<\/a> in purchase application data, which continued last week with another week of gains. That means we’ve had a positive trend for the last five weeks. Purchase apps were up 4%<\/strong> week to week, and as crazy as it might sound, we could end the year with more positive weekly prints than negative as the year-to-date count is 23 positive<\/strong> and 23 negative,<\/strong> with two<\/strong> flats prints.<\/p>\n

During the last two weeks of the year, nothing much usually happens with purchase apps as we prepare for Christmas and the New Year, but I will always track the data! But the fact that we can even talk about a positive year when mortgage rates got to 8%<\/a> demonstrates something that I have been talking about since Nov. 9, 2022, and for many years: It\u2019s rare the U.S. to have existing home sales trends below 4 million <\/strong>with any duration post-1996. We have a cores set of 4 million homebuyers every year for more than 25 years, and that hasn’t broken yet.<\/p>\n

Weekly housing inventory data<\/h2>\n

Weekly active listing data is declining now like it always does every year at this time due to seasonality. Higher mortgage rates resulted in higher inventory during part of the fall and forced the seasonal decline in inventory to start later this year. However, the laws of seasonality always win in the end, and we are well on the road to a seasonal decline in inventory. <\/p>\n

Last year, according to Altos Research<\/a>, the seasonal peak for housing inventory <\/a>was Oct. 28. The seasonal peak this year was on Nov. 17.<\/p>\n