Monday, March 30, 2009

Fed Keeps Hammer Down on Mortgage Rates

Sometimes we get lost in the immediate things around us, we forget some of the other things the Government has been working on, and how they are affecting our business today…

Great article…and very relevant!

The Government put into play in November the plan to buy Mortgage Backed Securities, and lend a hand to Freddie mac…well, this is one of the big reasons the rates have stayed low…

So, remember, the plans are being added today, and coupled with things of the past, will begin to put the floor in prices and stimulate more buyers to buy…if the homes are priced right!

Fed keeps hammer down on mortgage rates
Mortgage-backed securities purchases could reach $1.25 trillion

By Inman News, Thursday, March 19, 2009.
Inman News

In a bid to keep mortgage rates low, the Federal Reserve said Wednesday it will boost purchases of mortgage-backed securities this year to as much as $1.25 trillion -- a $750 billion increase from a previous commitment.

The move is part of a $1.15 trillion expansion of the Fed's balance sheet that's intended to encourage borrowing and revive the economy. Having effectively slashed short-term interest rates to zero, the Federal Open Market Committee is resorting to other means to stimulate growth.

In addition to stepping up purchases of mortgage-backed securities, the Fed said it would purchase up to $300 billion in long-term Treasury securities over the next six months, and doubled a previous commitment to buy $100 billion in debt issued by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Home Loan Banks.

The move should give would-be homebuyers and those seeking to refinance confidence that mortgage interest rates will stay low for months to come. So far, the Fed has used up only $217 billion of a $600 billion program launched last fall to drive down mortgage interest rates.

In November, the Fed kicked off the program with a promise to buy up to $100 billion in debt from Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Home Loan Banks, and $500 billion in mortgage-backed securities backed by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae. The program has been widely credited with bringing down interest rates on conventional, conforming mortgages to historic lows of around 5 percent.

Some economists worry that the Fed's growing obligations, along with other government spending and tax cuts intended to jump-start the economy, will spur inflation. The committee, which sets monetary policy, issued a statement saying the near-term outlook for the economy is "weak," and that members expect inflation to "remain subdued."

No comments: