Weekly Market Update
The Fed cut rates, though they pared back their forecasts for additional cuts next year. Inflation was cooler than forecasted, while existing home sales moved higher and builders feel more optimistic about sales next year. Read on for these top stories:
Fed Cut Rates 25 Basis Point
Fed’s Favored Inflation Measure Tamer Than Expected
Existing Homes Sales Rise For The Second Straight Month
Home Builder’s Feeling Positive About The Future
New Construction Eased in November
Also Of Note
Fed Cuts Rates 25 Basis Points
As expected, the Fed cut their benchmark Federal Funds Rate by 25 basis points, bringing it to a new range of 4.25% to 4.5%. This decision followed the 50-basis point cut the Fed made in September and the 25-basis point cut made in November. There was one dissent, as Cleveland President Beth Hammack preferred a pause to additional cuts.
Note that when the Fed cuts rates, they are reducing the Fed Funds Rate, which is not mortgage rates or even a long-term rate. The Fed Funds Rate is a short-term, overnight rate that banks use to lend money to one another, but it is the building block for all interest rates.
What’s the bottom line? Remember, the Fed began aggressively hiking the Fed Funds Rate to try to curb runaway inflation that became rampant after the pandemic. More recently, cooling consumer inflation and rising unemployment caused the Fed to begin this latest series of rate cuts. And while inflation has cooled considerably after peaking in 2022, the progress lower towards the Fed’s 2% target has stalled in recent months.
This caused the Fed to be more hawkish in their latest forward guidance. Their "dot plot" of member forecasts signaled that two rate cuts are expected next year, down from four cuts forecasted in September, though these estimates can change quickly based on upcoming data.
Fed’s Favored Inflation Measure Tamer Than Expected
Existing Home Sales Rise for Second Straight Month
Home Builders Feeling Positive About the Future
New Construction Eased in November
Also of Note
The final reading for third quarter GDP showed that the U.S. economy grew by 3.1%, coming in above the second estimate of 2.8% reported in November. By comparison, we saw 3% and 1.6% growth in the second and first quarters of this year. Economic activity in the third quarter was driven by consumer spending, exports, federal government spending and business investment.
Meanwhile, November’s Retail Sales came in stronger than forecasts, boosted by car sales and online shopping. Sales in October were also revised higher. And the latest weekly unemployment claims (Initial -22K to 220K; Continuing -5K to 1.874M, near a three-year high) show the ongoing trend in the labor market continues. Employers are holding on to their workers while also slowing down hiring.
What to Look for This Week
November’s New Home Sales (Tuesday) and the latest Jobless Claims (Thursday) highlight an otherwise quiet week. The markets will be closed on Wednesday for Christmas.
Technical Picture
Mortgage Bonds broke above the ceiling at the 100.43 Fibonacci level on Friday, ending last week in the middle of a narrow range with 100.43 now acting as a floor and a ceiling close by at 100.61. The 10-year ended last week trading between a floor at 4.5% and a ceiling at the 4.588% Fibonacci level.