The Federal Reserve lifted the federal funds rate on Wednesday by a quarter percentage point to a range of 1.5 percent to 1.75 percent. Two more rate hikes are expected this year. Three are expected in 2019, rather than two as initially projected.
If you’re a homeowner with a fixed-rate mortgage, rest easy. If you’re a homebuyer and are shopping for a fixed-rate loan, don’t panic. But if you have an adjustable-rate mortgage or took out a home equity line of credit, pay close attention. ARMs and HELOCs will be more costlyBorrowers with adjustable-rate mortgages that are past the fixed-rate period or home equity lines of credit can expect to see higher rates very soon. “The Fed hike is the tide that lifts all the short-term interest rate ships,” says Greg McBride, CFA, Bankrate.com’s chief financial analyst. These loans are typically tied to the prime rate. When the federal funds rate changes, the prime rate does as well. That means a quarter-point Fed increase means a quarter-point increase on HELOCs and ARMs within the next couple of statement cycles, McBride says. “Whatever your ARM is pegged to – a one-year Treasury, or Libor – it’s a lot higher now than it was one year ago,” McBride says. “And that means the next payment reset could be a doozy. A lot of ARMs will jump to 4.75 percent or 5 percent this year, but borrowers can refinance into a fixed rate below 4.5 percent.” Rates on longer-term mortgages to gradually riseInterest rates on 15-year and 30-year fixed-rate mortgages don’t move in lock-step with the federal funds rate. These loans are tied to 10-year Treasuries, so borrowers looking to get a 30-year mortgage aren’t directly affected by the latest Fed hike. However, the federal funds rate does contribute to the longer-term trends of the 10-year Treasury, and long-term fixed mortgages as a result. With the Fed predicting five more rate hikes over the next two years, the trend for long-term mortgage rates is up. Some experts predict that the Fed’s rate hikes, along with a strong economy and growing deficits, will push the average 30-year fixed mortgage rate to 5 percent in the next couple of years. It would be the first time it’s hit the 5 percent mark since April 2011, according to Bankrate data. “I do see a 5 percent and even a 6 percent rate coming, a year or two out,” says Susan Wachter, co-director of the Penn Institute for Urban Research and a Wharton professor of real estate and finance. “And that, amazingly enough, takes us back to normal. We’ve been living in a world where mortgage rates have been incredibly low.” Consumers who are on the fence about getting a mortgage should act sooner rather than later to make sure they get the lowest rate possible.
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6/16/2021 03:20:27 am
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