Planet Money - Rate Expectations
Episode Date: September 13, 2024The Federal Reserve raised interest rates to get inflation under control. One side effect is that taking out a mortgage to buy a home has gotten very expensive. That's especially a problem for some ho...meowners who managed to get a lower mortgage rate years ago. They have a sort of... champagne problem. Or, "golden handcuffs" as it's called.These homeowners may find they are "locked in" to their current home. In order to move to a new home, they have to take out a new mortgage at a much higher rate. It is one of the many problems plaguing the housing market right now.The Fed is expected to start cutting rates next week. Will the golden handcuff mess finally start to unlock? And what does it mean for people looking to buy their first home?On today's episode: We go deep into the golden handcuff problem and why it matters for everyone (including non-homeowners). We have FOMO about a big economic symposium in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. And we contemplate how to pronounce one of the most important interest rates in the economy: The IORB.This episode was hosted by Kenny Malone and Alexi Horowitz-Ghazi. It was produced by Sean Saldana. It was edited by Jess Jiang and fact-checked by Sierra Juarez. Engineering by Cena Loffredo. Alex Goldmark is Planet Money's executive producer.Help support Planet Money and hear our bonus episodes by subscribing to Planet Money+ in Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org/planetmoney.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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This is Planet Money from NPR.
We are mere days away from a big Fed announcement.
By all accounts, Jerome Powell, chairman of the Federal Reserve, is expected to cut interest
rates next week.
And people expect that because he's basically been saying this is going to happen for months.
Yeah, I mean, albeit in these very Fed-speaky ways, you know, like this.
It will likely be appropriate to begin dialing back policy restraint at some point this year.
Translation? Rate cuts are coming soon. Possibly. Yeah, here's another one. If the economy evolves
broadly as we expect, most FOMC participants see it as likely to
be appropriate to begin lowering the policy rate at some point this year.
Yeah, you know, lots of people have been watching that and hearing this stuff and interpreting
it as interest rates are going to drop soon.
You know, of course, fancy financial types are watching this, but also regular people.
Yeah, because changes in interest rates
can affect everything from the amount you earn
in a savings account to the interest you pay
on a credit card to the rate you get charged
when you take out an auto loan.
But, but Alexi, I would argue,
I think both of us would argue,
there is one group of people in particular
who have been waiting for the Fed
to make a move more than anyone else.
That would be homeowners.
If you had to describe your place in a couple of words,
what would it be?
Um, cozy is charitable.
Uh-huh.
Ha ha ha ha.
This is Brenda Miller from Los Angeles.
She bought her house in 2010
when she and her husband had one child.
The place has two bedrooms, one bathroom.
It's 720 square feet, which is cozy.
Yeah.
But with one child, no problem.
It worked.
But then they had another child and then another child.
And now they are a family of five plus.
We have a really large German shepherd.
Okay.
An elusive cat and two frogs.
Mm-hmm.
The frogs?
Why do you have frogs, Brenda?
My teen is obsessed with frogs
and did a whole PowerPoint presentation
about why we should get frogs
and did a science fair project on them.
Yeah, so that's like nine carbon-based life form squeezed into a two bed, one bath.
And it is a not going great.
They fight over the bathroom.
The frog aquarium takes up like two to 3% of the square footage.
And you do not have to be a genius to know that like, maybe it'd be nice if Brenda
and the family had a little more room.
The problem is they have an amazing mortgage.
2.625, which is super low. I know. Oh my God.
Yeah. Brenda locked in 2.625% back in 2021 when you could get some of the lowest mortgage rates
in the history of the country. Now a mortgage is of course a house loan. So every month, Brenda owes the bank some payment plus 2.625% of like whatever's left
on their house.
However, if they were to take out a mortgage right now, rates are an average of 6.35%.
So you know, more than double what she's currently paying in interest every month.
And what all this means is that it is really hard for Brenda and her family to justify moving.
Like they would have to swap their cheap mortgage for an expensive mortgage.
Plus, they'd be buying a bigger, more expensive place at that higher mortgage rate.
Yeah. And so that would be thousands, literally thousands of dollars more at the current interest rates.
And that is just not feasible. That is thousands more dollars more are the current interest rates. And that is just not feasible.
That is thousands more dollars per month.
And so they are stuck
with what many people call
golden handcuffs.
Golden because this is a good problem,
they own a house and they have a historically
good mortgage rate.
And handcuffs because they are stuck.
And Brenda, she's fully aware
that she is locked into a pair of those golden handcuffs because they are stuck. And Brenda, she's fully aware that she is locked
into a pair of those golden handcuffs.
Oh yeah.
Oh yeah.
And how do you feel about it?
I'm really thankful that we have a house and
I'm thankful that we have a place to live.
But at the same time, I mean, I have dreams
where I'm like walking through a house and
it's like, Oh, I didn't know this room was
here and like finding hidden space. And then I wake up and it's like, oh, I didn't know this room was here.
And like finding hidden space.
And then I wake up and it's like, no, there's no hidden space.
So we just have to get creative.
And Brenda is one of tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands of Americans also wearing the
golden handcuffs.
It is messing things up for them, obviously, but it's also messing things up for the housing
market for everybody.
Hello and welcome to Planet Money, I'm Kenny Malone.
And I'm Alexi Horowitz-Ghazi. And after years of the Federal Reserve's interest rates going up
and up and up again, it seems like we are finally on the cusp of rates going down,
which should trickle through the entire economy
and make it cheaper to borrow money.
That is what should happen.
And so today on the show, simply put, what happens when the rates cut through specifically
the lens of housing?
How will it affect mortgage rates and the housing market?
Will it unlock the pesky golden handcuffs mess?
And will it help the rest of us, including people like you and me, Alexi, who do not
own a home at all yet?
Fingers crossed, Kenny.
Now Golden Handcuffs is clearly the most fun way to talk about people who have such amazing
mortgages that they don't want to move.
But there is a more technical phrase for this situation.
It is known as being locked in.
Yeah, that's what people who study this stuff call it,
including Professor Julia Fonseca,
who is, herself, amongst the locked in.
So I have a 2.1% rate on a 15-year fix,
so that is extremely low.
Mm-hmm. If you hear a bit of jealousy in my voice,
you are correct.
2.1% is bananas.
Although, unlike the golden handcuffed Brenda Miller
in her family, Julia says she's actually
pretty happy in her house and not actively looking to move.
I mostly just have housing FOMO.
And so, you know, I always wonder,
is there a better house out there?
We would describe you as locked in-ish. Well, so the way that...
Happily locked in? Happily locked in, I would say.
Julia is a professor of finance at the University of Illinois. And she says there are so many
people locked in or I guess happily locked in, in part because of what's happened with
mortgage rates over the last 40 years.
Since the 1980s, rates have been generally dropping
and dropping and dropping.
So yeah, some people bought a house
at the exact right moment,
when rates hit the lowest in history,
an average of 2.65%.
That was back in January of 2021.
Plus other people were able to refinance during this time and also got incredibly good,
historically good mortgages.
And so to put some numbers to this, as of March, nearly 60% of borrowers had locked
in a rate at or below 4%.
Okay, so they get to keep this rate for decades so long as they don't move.
So six of every 10 borrowers are very locked into their mortgages right now.
And if they get a job offer somewhere else or if they want to move nearer to family,
well, Julia's research shows that people are often deciding like,
no, I have to stay put.
But the thing that I think we can't lose sight of is that these decisions then go on
to affect other people.
Right, and to understand that, Julia says,
you have to first understand that in normal times,
there's this critical natural cycle to housing.
Yeah, people, you know, they rent,
then maybe they buy their first home,
then if their family expands,
they move up again to a bigger home. You can think of the housing market as this ladder with different steps.
So one step is going to be rentals.
The next step is going to be smaller homes.
Another step is going to be bigger homes.
So yeah, people start out climbing up this ladder,
and then at some point, when they get older, maybe the kids move out,
people sell their bigger home and start moving back down that ladder.
That is the natural cycle. People move out and new people have places to move into.
The problem is that cycle is broken right now.
Super broken. Like, Julia's research shows that even 80 to 85 year old homeowners,
especially in expensive areas, are still somewhat locked
into their mortgages. So these aging owners at the top of the ladder, they often have
no reason to start climbing back down the ladder. No reason to downsize because selling
their big home means losing their great mortgages.
And this Julia says is a big part of what's locking up the whole housing cycle. So owners of large homes are staying put.
Now that's going to make it harder for owners of smaller homes to upgrade.
And that in turn is going to make it harder for renters to then buy their first home because
those are typically those smaller homes.
Do we know at what number this unlocks?
Right. smaller homes. Do we know at what number this unlocks? Right, so the the point
where people would get unlocked that is where the difference between your rate
and the current rate is a little below 2%. That is when you're no longer locked
in. So homeowners theoretically need rates to drop about 2% below their
current rate. This is because it costs money to trade in a mortgage to either refinance or get a new
mortgage for a new house.
But think about what that means.
So you know, Julia mentioned earlier that the majority of borrowers are golden handcuffed
with mortgages at 4% or lower.
That is really low.
And yet they would need even lower rates. They
would need new historically low rates before they are all unlocked from their golden handcuffs.
But Julia says those are just theoretical unlocking points. In reality, lots of homeowners
can't wait for a perfect number. So to get a sense of what's happening on the ground,
we called up.
Hi, I'm Sarah Haake, a residential real estate agent in Washington, D.C.
A realtor. Sarah is a realtor and she's sold dozens and dozens and dozens of houses during
this notably strange housing market. And we asked Sarah when she thinks things will start
to unfreeze.
You know, there's this prediction among real estate agents that once rates hit 599, we're going
to see a flood of new listings hit the market.
5.99.
For reference, mortgage rates are between 6 and 7% right now.
So then would dropping below 6 fix everything?
Well, that is complicated because of just how broken housing has been.
Yeah.
So, you know, just to step back for a second, to talk about some basic
housing supply and demand stuff, you know, over the last few years, mortgage
rates have gone up, which means it costs more to borrow money and buy a house.
So, so people should want to buy houses less.
And then in response to this drop in demand, home prices should theoretically
drop.
However, that is not really what's happened.
You know, some housing markets may have
cooled off a little bit, but, but generally
home prices have been higher than when rates
started to go up.
And that's in part because supply has also kind
of dried up.
Like all these golden handcuffs mean lots of
homeowners do not want to sell their house.
We simply don't have enough homes for everyone.
And that's what has kept home prices increasing,
regardless of what the interest rates have been.
Now, maybe you've been shouting
at your podcast app this whole time.
What about building new houses?
Well, that is not happening either.
Lots of reasons for that, including high interest rates.
Right. It costs more to borrow. Developers might not be building as much new housing.
And in fact, new builds are down about 20% from a few years ago.
Like look, interest rates and mortgage rates, they are not the only thing that affects the
housing supply and demand, but they certainly
matter a lot in a moment like this.
And that's why lots of people seem to be watching the Fed, wondering when those rate
cut announcements are coming.
After the break, we try to ask the Fed if they can fix all of this, assuming the Fed
wasn't on a working vacation in a scenic Wyoming town.
Which, spoiler, they were while we were reporting this story.
The town of Jackson Hole, Wyoming is famous for, I quote here,
upscale ski resorts, rustic campsites and dude ranches.
And I had to Google that because as a Planet Money host, I know Jackson Hole for a big
old economic symposium that happens there every August.
Anyone who's anyone in the world of central banking goes and the most anticipated part
is a speech by the chairperson of the Federal
Reserve. Now we are mentioning all of this because this whole episode was reported the week of that
Jackson Hole Symposium which meant that anyone who works at the Fed was very hard to get on the phone.
So we called someone who used to work at the Fed. Don Cohn. Hey Don, it's Kenny Malone from Planet Money.
Don was at the Fed for about 40 years.
The last four of those, I was the vice chairman
to Ben Bernanke through the financial crisis.
Oh yeah, Don's a real one.
And even though he hasn't worked at the Fed
for more than a decade, he told us he was all packed up
and headed to where else?
Where are you headed? To Jackson Hole. You're going? Yeah, I am going. than a decade, he told us he was all packed up and headed to where else?
Where are you headed?
To Jackson Hole.
You're going?
Yeah, I am going.
I've been going for many years, but yes.
We did want to grab Dawn quickly because, well, everyone thinks rate cuts seem to be
coming and Dawn has been in the room when rates have changed in the past.
We wanted to know everything.
How exactly does a cut ripple through the economy?
What will it mean for mortgages?
And what is happening?
Like what is literally happening?
The exact moment the rate gets cut.
Is there a person who presses a button and makes that change?
Like, not really.
No.
Now after much digging and asking around, I can tell you that the announcement is made,
a computer team programs the rate change into a computer, and then the new rate goes into
effect the following day.
So you know, someone seems to be pressing some button at some point.
Yes, it does.
But let's talk about what rate or rates would actually be changing here.
The rate that's worth focusing on is an interest rate
that you and I will never have access to, Kenny.
It is called the IORB, or the interest on reserve balance.
I've been taking to calling it the YORB.
Sure, but the YORB, we should say, is just for banks
because one special thing that banks can do
is hold money at the Federal Reserve,
and the Fed pays interest on that money.
So, you know, when a rate cut is announced, the YORB
is one of the rates that the Fed is actually setting.
And right now, it's set at 5.4%.
And people are expecting Jerome Powell
to announce a cut to this rate, probably a quarter
or a half a percentage point.
Now, imagine you are a bank, and you have this kind
of savings account at the Fed. Suddenly that savings account pays less interest.
And well, you know, okay, so now the bank is less excited about storing its money at
the Fed.
So maybe the bank is more likely to lend that extra money out, maybe even at lower rates,
lending it to other banks.
So you can imagine more money starts flowing and that just kind of ripples through the whole economy.
But in reality, the ripple is less like a bunch of dominoes falling one by one by one,
and more like all the dominoes falling at once.
The announcement is made, and it happens in markets right away.
Was that a finger snap I heard there?
Well, it could have been. It was a figurative finger snap.
Lickety Split, all of these members in the markets
adjust to the new norm,
an ever so slightly lower interest rate.
So, you know, literally changing a rate,
the YORB rate, I guess, in this case,
that is one of the Fed's most important tools.
But it goes hand in hand with another tool,
managing the market's expectations about the rate cut.
So this is really, I can't emphasize enough,
this is about their expectations about the future.
If the Fed does what everyone expects it to do,
Yes.
sort of nothing will happen in markets
or very little will happen in markets.
In fact, markets have already been adjusting
to the future Fed announcement because for months,
the Fed has been saying things that sound an awful lot
like, you know, we're looking at a rate cut.
A rate cut?
Yeah, we're looking at it.
Okay, a rate cut increasingly makes sense.
We let Don jump off the phone and get back to prepping for his Jackson Hole trip.
Thank you so much for doing this in a pinch. I really appreciate it.
All right. Bye-bye.
And on we went to try and understand the expectations bit a little bit more.
And we called up Gina Smialek.
I'm the Fed and Economy reporter at the New York Times, and I'm the author of Limitless,
which is a book about the Fed in the 21st century. So what what time did you say it was there? It's 5 a.m
Not too crazy. I mean maybe a little but but very generous because Gina was in fact already in
Jackson Hole, Wyoming and we learned how small the world of the Fed is when we told her we did just talk to former Fed vice
Chair Don Cohn. He was like packing his bags on the way out the door.
Oh, I didn't realize he was coming.
Oh, that's great.
He's coming.
Oh, cool.
I'll email him.
Now it is actually quite useful
that everyone is circling around Jackson Hole
because it is a perfect example
of this second very useful Fed tool.
The way the Fed can use expectations to its rate changing advantage.
Yeah, so as we mentioned, the economic symposium at Jackson Hole, it all centers around a big
speech from the Fed chair, Jerome Powell. But to be clear, this is not the speech where he announces
a rate cut or not a rate cut. It is just a speech. But of course, every word of every Jerome Powell
speech gets scrutinized and
interpreted like some ancient Babylonian tablet.
You know, I think there's a whole cottage industry of people who spend their day, like
which I help fuel and the media helps to fuel, of people who spend their days just trying
to figure out what the Fed's going to do next.
This is what Dawn meant by expectations. Actually, changing rates matters, of course.
But the Fed has come to realize that a powerful tool in its arsenal is just talking,
laying down clues and hints and details about the things the Fed is watching.
And then letting that cottage industry scramble and make their market moves based on that.
Sometimes this tool is called open mouth operations,
which is a play on open market operations,
which is the old way the fed used to primarily move interest rates,
which is a deeply nerdy and solid fed joke. And it is okay if you don't get it.
Yes, it will not be on the test,
but Gina says the fed has realized that just talking about changing interest
rates can affect markets.
This current juncture is a great example. Actually,
they're clearly sort of like pivoting their stance
and trying to get to a point where interest rates
are a little bit lower.
And they've managed to lower interest rates quite a bit
without actually lowering interest rates at all,
just through open mouth operations, you know,
just by talking.
It's true. The Fed has not cut rates.
And yet the market has been slowly building in a rate cut especially
if you look at things that have a longer lifespan so these are investments that
are really more about the general direction of things you know that the
10-year treasuries those have started to move as if oh looks like rates will be
coming down over the next few years and also mortgages those rates have also
been slowly coming down again without any actual cuts from the Fed.
Now, we should mention markets are also watching things like job numbers and inflation
numbers and reacting to that stuff, which the Fed is also watching and reacting to.
And the markets know that the Fed is also watching and reacting to that.
And so it is just this like really tied up tangled expectations knot.
But look, the point here is if you're looking to buy your first home or if you're blocked into a
really good mortgage, it is probably not going to help to watch the Fed make an announcement.
Because as Gina puts it, it's not that they're directly going out and saying, hey, Mr. Morriage,
man, like you bring down your rate. It's it's that when they set that benchmark rate, it really trickles out.
Yeah, it trickles out.
And the people who sell mortgages and trade mortgages, they shift their
expectations and, and what they're willing to buy and sell mortgages for.
When the rate cut does come, the only thing that would move markets is a
big old surprise if Jerome Powell did something totally unexpected.
And at this point, not cutting rates would be that.
Gina says the market is already betting on one of two rate cuts.
You know, it could people are betting it could be either size 25 or 50.
25 or 50 basis points.
So that's one quarter of a percentage point or one half of a percentage point.
And so I think that's that's actually one thing people are really closely watching Chair Powell for.
What if he threw him 37.5 basis points,
like smack dab in the middle?
That is not how the Fed works.
The Fed moves in 25 basis point increments.
That's too bad. That would surprise everyone.
So should you expect mortgage rates to suddenly come down
if the Fed cuts its interest rates in mid-September?
The answer is
not really. They've been slowly coming down already because everyone has been expecting the
Fed to make this cut. And you know, quick postscript here in case you missed it. Since we
started reporting this episode, the big old Jackson Hole speech, it's happened. Thank you,
Karen. And thanks to our hosts from the Kansas City Fed.
Jerome Powell came out and said, frankly,
possibly the clearest thing he has said in months.
The time has come for policy to adjust.
The direction of travel is clear in the timing and pace
of racism.
Honestly, no translation needed this time.
This episode was produced by Shawnee, And honestly, no translation needed this time.
This episode was produced by Sean Saldana, it was edited by Jess Jang and fact-checked
by Cierra Juarez.
Engineering by Sina LaFredo, Alex Goldmark is Planet Money's executive producer.
A very, very special thanks this week to Shaf Bashar and Jonathan Wachtel.
I'm Kenny Malone.
And I'm Kenny Malone.
And I'm Alexi Horowitz-Ghazi.
This is NPR.
Thanks for listening.