Oct 26 2011, 6:02 PM ET
The central bank may want to do more to help the housing market and
stimulate the economy, but it may be out of juice
During the week ending October 6th, the average fixed interest rate on a
30-year mortgage dipped below 4% for the first time, according to Freddie Mac. The Mortgage Bankers
Association reported that
refinancing applications rose -- by just 1%. These historic rates may not be low
enough for the Federal Reserve: reports indicate
that some central bankers want to encourage more refinancing and home sales. But
have the Fed's efforts reached a saturation point?
The Fed's Next Move?
When the Fed meets next week, the housing market may be on its mind. Its
actions announced
after its September meeting were squarely
aimed at mortgages: it sought to push down long-term interest rates through
two policy tweaks. Comparing the week ending October 14th to the week ending
September 16th, the Fed's effect on the housing market hasn't been particularly
impressive: refinance applications are down 11% and purchase applications are
down 6%.
The Washington Post reports
that the Fed may humor buying additional mortgage-backed securities to push down rates even farther. At this time, they're reinvesting maturing MBS into new MBS.
But a new program would expand their holdings of the mortgage securities. The
question is: would it really do much?
Diving Into the Data
Check out the chart below. It shows refinancing applications per the MBA
versus the average 30-year prime mortgage interest rate per Freddie Mac. The
chart goes back to 2005.*
Applications were relatively low until mortgage interest rates began to fall
below 6% in early 2008. Then the financial crisis hit and they plummeted. But
they rebounded strongly in 2009, as rates approached and then dipped below 5%.
Then applications dropped again. Since that time, we've seen a few mini-booms,
but nothing near those 2009 highs. In the meantime, however, interest rates have
continued to fall.
At this point, it looks like interest rates would have to break through a
significant new bottom barrier to encourage much more refinancing. If the Fed
can't manage to slice off another 0.5% or more, Americans aren't likely to
respond with an enormous demand for refinancing. Even, then, the result may be
modest. At this point, many are relatively content with their already low
mortgage interest rates.
Others, however, aren't
managing to qualify for refinancing. An initiative
announced by the Obama administration this week hopes to change that by
allowing underwater borrowers with loans from Fannie Mae and Freddie to
refinance. The program, however, is only expected to reach 800,000 people. For
the numbers to rise much above that, we'll need to see banks get into the game.
Reports
indicate that could happen as a part of their foreclosure settlement with
the state attorneys general, however.
Home purchases are another story entirely. Despite the ultra-low interest
rates, they remain extremely weak. Just last week, mortgage purchase applications hit a new low-point that you'd have to go all the way back to 1996
to match. That's just a week after mortgage interest rates hit an all-time low.
Interest rates alone don't appear to be enough to encourage home buying.
Next week the Fed must ask itself whether a new effort to push mortgage
interest rates even lower can accomplish much.
Additional action may only push
down rates a little, failing to spur much additional refinancing or many
purchases. Meanwhile, another dose of monetary stimulus could make the Fed's
exit even more difficult. It must decide whether or not that potential harm will
outweigh whatever economic benefit additional MBS purchases might provide.
*Note: The MBA asks that I don't publish their index values, but the curve
alone should give you a good idea of magnitude.
Image Credit: REUTERS/Rebecca Cook
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