Why
Do Mortgage Rates Change?
To
understand why mortgage rates change we must first ask
the more general question, "Why do interest rates
change?" It is important to realize that there
is not one interest rate, but many interest rates!
- Prime
rate: The rate offered to a bank's best customers.
- Treasury
bill rates: Treasury bills are short-term debt
instruments used by the U.S. Government to finance
their debt. Commonly called T-bills they come in denominations
of 3 months, 6 months and 1 year. Each treasury bill
has a corresponding interest rate (i.e. 3-month T-bill
rate, 1-year T-bill rate).
- Treasury
Notes: Intermediate-term debt instruments used
by the U.S. Government to finance their debt. They
come in denominations of 2 years, 5 years and 10 years.
- Treasury
Bonds: Long-debt instruments used by the U.S.
Government to finance its debt. Treasury bonds come
in 30-year denominations.
- Federal
Funds Rate: Rates banks charge each other for
overnight loans.
- Federal
Discount Rate: Rate New York Fed charges to member
banks.
- Libor:
: London Interbank Offered Rates. Average London
Eurodollar rates.
- 6
month CD rate: The average rate that you get when
you invest in a 6-month CD.
- 11th
District Cost of Funds: Rate determined by averaging
a composite of other rates.
- Fannie
Mae-Backed Security rates: Fannie Mae pools large
quantities of mortgages, creates securities with them,
and sells them as Fannie Mae-backed securities. The
rates on these securities influence mortgage rates
very strongly.
- Ginnie
Mae-Backed Security rates: Ginnie Mae pools large
quantities of mortgages, secures them and sells them
as Ginnie Mae-backed securities. The rates on these
securities influence mortgage rates on FHA and VA
loans.
Interest-rate
movements are based on the simple concept of supply
and demand. If the demand for credit (loans) increases,
so do interest rates. This is because there are more
buyers, so sellers can command a better price, i.e.
higher rates. If the demand for credit reduces, then
so do interest rates. This is because there are more
sellers than buyers, so buyers can command a lower better
price, i.e. lower rates. When the economy is expanding
there is a higher demand for credit, so rates move higher,
whereas when the economy is slowing the demand for credit
decreases and so do interest rates.
This
leads to a fundamental concept:
- Bad
news (i.e. a slowing economy) is good news for
interest rates (i.e. lower rates).
- Good
news (i.e. a growing economy) is bad news for
interest rates (i.e. higher rates).
A
major factor driving interest rates is inflation. Higher
inflation is associated with a growing economy. When
the economy grows too strongly, the Federal Reserve
increases interest rates to slow the economy down and
reduce inflation. Inflation results from prices of goods
and services increasing. When the economy is strong,
there is more demand for goods and services, so the
producers of those goods and services can increase prices.
A strong economy therefore results in higher real-estate
prices, higher rents on apartments and higher mortgage
rates.
Mortgage
rates tend to move in the same direction as interest
rates. However, actual mortgage rates are also based
on supply and demand for mortgages. The supply/demand
equation for mortgage rates may be different from the
supply/demand equation for interest rates. This might
sometimes result in mortgage rates moving differently
from other rates. For example, one lender may be forced
to close additional mortgages to meet a commitment they
have made. This results in them offering lower rates
even though interest rates may have moved up!
There
is an inverse relationship between bond prices and bond
rates. This can be confusing. When bond prices move
up, interest rates move down and vice versa. This is
because bonds tend to have a fixed price at maturitytypically
$1000. If the price of the bond is currently at $900
and there are 10 years left on the bond and if interest
rates start moving higher, the price of the bond starts
dropping. The higher interest rates will cause increased
accumulation of interest over the next 5 years, such
that a lower price (e.g. $880) will result in the same
maturity price, i.e. $1000.
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