U.S. mortgage rates tumbled the most in two years last week, data from a key industry lobby group indicated Wednesday, as the impact of a big rally in the bond market and signals on autumn Federal Reserve rate cuts provides some much-needed relief to the struggling market. 

The Mortgage Bankers Association said the average 30-year fixed rate for conforming loan balances of less than $726,200 fell to 6.55% for the period ending on August 3, that’s down more than a quarter of a percentage point and the lowest since May of last year. 

The MBA’s seasonally adjusted Purchase Index, which tracks mortgage applications for purchases of single-family homes, rose 0.8% from the previous week while its refinancing index surged 15.9%.

“Mortgage rates decreased across the board last week and mortgage-application volume reached its highest level since January of this year,” said the MBA’s chief economist Joel Kan.

“Refinance applications increased across all loan types and were almost 60% higher than it was at this time last year and were at its highest level in two years,” he added.

Wall Street is betting that Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell will lead a series of interest rate cuts between now and the end of the year. 

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The massive improvement in borrowing costs is tied to one of the biggest bond market rallies of the years, which clipped around 40 basis points, or 0.4%, from 10-year U.S. Treasury yields, which banks used to calibrate their benchmark lending products. 

More rate cuts on tap

The rally was triggered in part by the Fed’s indication that it will likely lower its key lending rate, which currently sits at a two-decade high of 5.375%, later this fall as well as a softer-than-expected July jobs report that showed a slowdown in hiring and the highest headline unemployment rate in three years. 

Further relief on mortgage rates is likely over the final months of they year, as well, as Wall Street is betting that the Fed will lower its Fed Funds rate at each of the central bank’s next three meetings.

By December, according to the CME Group’s closely-tracked FedWatch tool, the Fed Funds rate will be one full percentage point lower and pegged at 4.375%.

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That could trigger a big decline in average mortgage rates, as 10-year Treasury bond yields adjust to the new Fed Funds rate.

“The best thing we can do for the housing market is to bring inflation down so that we can bring rates down so that the housing market can continue to normalize,” Fed Chairman Jerome Powell told reporters in Washington last month.

“There will still be a national housing shortage, as there was before the pandemic,” he added. “But the distortions that we see now with lock-ins and things like that,” will ease, Powell added.

Housing market needs homes

Lower rates could also spark a much-needed boost in home construction, which fell to an 8-month low in June as high mortgage rate sapped buyer demand. Permits for new construction, in fact, were at the lowest levels in a year.

Sales of existing homes are also on the ropes as owners, most of whom are locked-in at mortgage rates that are far lower than today’s levels, remain reluctant to sell and refinance at higher rates.

Existing home sales fell the most in nearly two years last month, according to the National Association of Realtors, while median prices rose 4.1% to a record high of $426,900, reflecting the dearth in new home construction. 

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Ian Shepherdson of Pantheon Macroeconomics, however, thinks it will take a bit longer for lower rate and accelerated construction to flow through the broader housing market. 

“The first few Fed rate cuts will do
nothing to boost the disposable incomes of most mortgage
holders, who locked-in very low rates during the pandemic,” he said.  “They won’t refinance until rates fall considerably further.”

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He also argues that lower Fed rates are likely to come as a result of weakening economic conditions, which will further suppress buying demand. 

“We doubt that mortgage demand will recover meaningfully soon, as
much of any boost from lower rates is likely to be offset by weaker
jobs growth and higher unemployment reducing the number of
potential buyers,” he added.

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