If the Fed Is Cutting Rates, Why Are Mortgage Rates Rising?

Expectations of inflationary policies under a second Trump administration were priced into the jump in mortgage rates.

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Mortgage rates jumped last week as investors processed the potential inflationary effects of President-elect Donald Trump’s win, accelerating a weekslong increase that could keep many buyers and sellers on the sidelines.

The average rate on a 30-year mortgage, the most popular home loan in the United States, rose to 6.79% last week, the highest since July, Freddie Mac reported Nov. 7. That was up from 6.72% a week earlier, and about 0.7% above where rates stood six weeks ago. Rates peaked at about 7.8% late last year and had been easing until early October, when stronger-than-expected economic reports and bond market bets on Trump’s win drove them up again.

The latest rise in borrowing costs is linked to Trump’s decisive election victory. Mortgages tend to track the yield on 10-year Treasury bonds, which jumped 0.2 percentage points Nov. 6 — its biggest move in more than two years — in a sign that investors are worried about Trump’s proposals, from taxes and tariffs to immigration, fueling inflation and interest rate increases.

“It is clear purchase demand is very sensitive to mortgage rates in the current market environment,” Sam Khater, Freddie Mac’s chief economist, said in a statement. “As soon as rates began to rise in early October, purchase applications fell, and over the last month have declined 10%.”

Investors had bet that the Federal Reserve would cut its benchmark rate by a quarter percentage point at the central bank’s meeting Nov. 7. Expectations of Fed rate cuts typically push down mortgage rates, as they did in the lead-up to the Fed’s half-point cut in September. That downward drift was a welcome development for prospective buyers — and for potential sellers, many of whom are locked into the low rates they secured early in the pandemic, when the average 30-year rate was around 3%.

But a string of robust economic data since the Fed’s initial cut, coupled with inflation fears tied to Trump’s proposed policies, is once again pushing up mortgage rates, despite predictions that the Fed will continue cutting interest rates.

Expectations of inflationary policies under a second Trump administration were largely already priced into last week’s jump in mortgage rates. Rates could stay elevated, but how much they climb from here will depend on new information about the incoming Trump administration’s agenda and indications from the Fed about its rate-cutting cycle, analysts said.

“There’s a widespread expectation that Trump is going to cut taxes, and that will add to the deficit and the debt of the country,” said Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh, a professor of real estate and finance at Columbia University. “This current move is reflecting the market’s best guess of what his policies will mean.”

c.2024 The New York Times Company. This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

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