Today’s Weekly Market Update
The Fed held rates steady, as anticipated, with their forecasts showing that three cuts are still expected this year. Plus, February saw positive momentum in home sales and construction. Here are the top stories:
Fed Still Signals Three Rate Cuts in 2024
Existing Home Sales Hit Highest Level in a Year
Home Builders Feeling Positive
Favorable February for Housing Starts
Slight Decline in Initial Jobless Claims
Fed Still Signals Three Rate Cuts in 2024
After eleven rate hikes since March of 2022, the Fed once again left their benchmark Federal Funds Rate unchanged at a range of 5.25% to 5.5%. This decision was unanimous and marks the fifth straight meeting they held rates steady.
The Fed Funds Rate is the interest rate for overnight borrowing for banks and it is not the same as mortgage rates. The Fed has been aggressively hiking the Fed Funds Rate throughout this cycle to try to slow the economy and curb the runaway inflation that became rampant over the last few years.
What’s the bottom line? Despite some recent inflation readings that were hotter than expected, the Fed noted that three rate cuts are still expected this year. The Fed’s "dot plot" of member forecasts showed that 15 out of 19 members still expect cuts of between 50 and 100 basis points over the course of 2024.
Existing Home Sales Hit Highest Level in a Year
Home Builders Feeling Positive
Favorable February for Housing Starts
What to Look for This Week
We’ll get an update on signed contracts for February when New and Pending Home Sales data is released on Monday and Thursday, respectively. Plus, appreciation data for January from Case-Shiller and the Federal Housing Finance Agency will be reported on Tuesday.
Look for the final reading for fourth quarter 2023 GDP and the latest Jobless Claims on Thursday. Friday brings what will likely be the biggest news of the week – the Fed’s favored inflation measure, Personal Consumption Expenditures.
Technical Picture
Mortgage Bonds broke above their 50-day Moving Average last Friday, which was a positive technical development. The 10-year has broken beneath its 25-day and 100-day Moving Averages, ending last week battling the formidable 200-day Moving Average, which could be difficult to break through.