The Fed will soon cut U.S. interest rates. What will it mean for your
wallet?
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[July 31, 2019] By
Trevor Hunnicutt and Jason Lange
NEW YORK/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A decision
by the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates may do little at this point
to cut some of the costs that matter to many U.S. consumers.
From mortgages to credit cards, banks and other lenders may resist
offering substantially lower rates to consumers, analysts said, even if
the central bank makes a widely expected cut to its policy rate,
currently targeted between 2.25% and 2.50%.
For one thing, some borrowing costs are already low and markets have
already priced in expectations the Fed would support the economy.
Mortgage rates have also dropped, with rates on the average 30-year U.S.
home loan falling under 4.1%, near a 22-month low, more than half a
point below the average since the global financial crisis more than a
decade ago, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.
"If we drive down into the mid-3.7%, mid-3.8% range, you're talking
about historic affordability from a purchasing power standpoint," said
Mark Fleming, chief economist for First American Financial Corp, which
provides insurance related to real estate transactions. <FAF.N> "There's
not a lot of wiggle room here in the first place. I think we established
five or six years ago that a mortgage rate around 3.5% or 3.6% is a
floor. That's about as low as you can go." (https://tmsnrt.rs/2yq9LPO)
That low mortgage level was when the Fed's rates were near zero and the
central bank was buying mortgage bonds in the aftermath of the financial
crisis to drive longer-term rates even lower - a far cry from where
policy is now.
At the same time, one of the Fed's main goals in cutting rates is to
bring inflation up to the 2% level policymakers consider healthy, and
maybe even higher to make up for long periods of missing that target. If
the Fed succeeds, longer-term bonds most sensitive to inflation could
fall in price, causing their yields to rise. Because U.S. mortgages are
benchmarked to those longer-term bonds, rates could rise again.
(https://tmsnrt.rs/2Ml82U2)
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Federal Reserve Board building on Constitution Avenue is pictured in
Washington, U.S., March 19, 2019. REUTERS/Leah Millis/File Photo
For many consumers, the obstacle to buying a house has not been mortgage rates,
but stricter lending standards that reduced access to mortgages in the first
place. Big price increases and limited supply have also made housing less
affordable. Lower rates could make housing even more out of reach by spurring
demand, driving prices even higher.
Financing for new cars might be a different story, though, especially given the
large role of automakers themselves in the car loan business. Those businesses
have an incentive to increase lending to support the auto market. (https://tmsnrt.rs/2yo9EEj)
Savers, meanwhile, have been rewarded in recent months for shopping around for
higher-yielding savings accounts and certificates of deposit. Thanks to
increased competition, some online banks have been pushing yields up for those
products even with the expected rate cut.
That could change if the Fed is embarking on a prolonged series of rate cuts, as
some investors are betting. But the biggest factor could still be overall
competition between financial institutions for savers' money, said Morningstar
Inc analyst Eric Compton. (https://tmsnrt.rs/2ynqQto)
Consumers, however, are in a much better place than they have been in years, by
some measures. They have higher take-home pay, lower debt and better credit
scores than during the financial crisis. "You've got consumers that are pretty
healthy, savings rates are pretty good," said Neal Van Zutphen, president of
Intrinsic Wealth Counsel Inc, a financial planner. "They're taking advantage of
this anticipatory drop in rates." (https://tmsnrt.rs/2yr8hVr)
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt in New York and Jason Lange in Washington;
Editing by Leslie Adler)
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