Mortgage Markets Return to Normal

Before delving into the details, let me show you the answer, the chart showing the spread – difference- between the 30-year Fixed Rate Mortgage (FRM), as reported weekly by Freddie Mac, and the yield on the 10-year US Treasury Note (10T):

Mortgage rates

In recent years the 30-year Fixed Rate Mortgage (FRM) has averaged a spread of about 1.7% above the yield on the US 10-year Treasury (10T).

  As the table at the bottom of this post shows, that spread has seen some wide fluctuations at times of financial stress, reaching 3.1% in 2008 and 2.7% earlier this year.

The vast amount of liquidity the Federal Reserve pumped into the economy and into financial markets has created a booming stock market and has stabilized mortgage markets.

As financial markets have calmed down, the spread between FRM and 10T has been falling steadily since the middle of the year and is now within the normal range again.

What drives mortgage rates?
First, I will explain the link – or lack of link – between the Federal Funds rate (FF) and FRM – and what actually drives mortgage rates.

Five charts explain the factors driving mortgage rates. Mostly, the dates are those when the Fed has changed the FF over the last 5 years- 10 increases, followed by 5 decreases – plus two subsequent dates in 2020.

Fed Funds rate (FF)
The Fed Funds rate is the rate at which banks lend to each other overnight.
After increasing from 0% to 2.5% since late 2015, cuts in 2019 and 2020 have lowered the rate back down to 0.25%, following the dramatic and proactive cuts in March.

Fed Funds

 

30-year Fixed Rate Mortgage (FRM)
The FRM reached nearly 5% in late 2018, dropped below 3% in July and is now 2.71%:

Mortgage rates

10-year Treasury yield (10T)
The yield on the 10T is influenced by two major factors: the outlook for the economy (expanding businesses invest creating demand for money) and geopolitical events – the US dollar and US Treasuries are seen as a safe haven during times of uncertainty.

The yield reached 3.2% in November, 2018 (which was the time of the peak in the FRM), eased back under 2% in 2019 and then plummeted from 1.88% in early 2020 to just 0.58% in late April. It has mostly stayed in the 0.6-0.8% % range since then, but in recent weeks has been pushing upwards towards 1% as hopes rise for a vaccine which will lead to an economy returning to normal, with some catching up to do. With the possibility of increased spending by the Biden Administration (subject to the restraints of the Senate if the Republicans retain control) leading to yet more issuance of Treasuries to finance that spending, investors are starting to want to be paid more for their money.

Treasury yield

 

The spread, or difference, between FRM and FF
If there were a link between FF and FRM it would show up in this chart. In fact, the spread dropped from 3.7% in 2015 to 1.5% in  2019, increased to 3.26% in March and has since dropped back to 2.46%, demonstrating that there is no direct link between FF and FRM

Fed Funds

 

The spread, or difference, between FRM and 10T
We see more consistency between FRM and 10T, where the spread was in a much tighter range of 1.5% to 1.8% until the second half of 2019 and into 2020. It is this yield which has now returned to its historical norm at 1.79%.

Mortgage spread

Indeed, over the last several years the spread between FRM and 10T has been very stable averaging around 1.7%. But I would point out two things in this table: first, the spread widened significantly in the Great Recession in 2008; and, secondly, while the median spread for the year has been in a narrow range, within the years there have been quite wide variations – in particular look at 2008/2009 and again in 2020 where the spread has ranged from 1.8% to 2.7% – well above historic levels.

Mortgage spread

Comment
The FF rate affects the lending rate for credit cards, auto loans, adjustable rate mortgages, all of which are impacted by banks’ Prime Rates, which move with the FF rate. Fixed Rate Mortgages – the typical 30-year mortgage – have a longer life and their benchmark is the closest Treasury security, which is the 10T. Conventional mortgages are bundled and sold to investors, who require a risk premium – higher yield – over that offered by 10T.

As can be seen, that premium – spread – has been remarkable constant over recent years. It does fluctuate from time to time as the yield on 10T tends to move quickly at times – as we have seen this year – but in recent years it always comes back to around that 1.7% level.

.Mortgage rates
As the last table showed, whereas over time the spread between FRM and 10T has been consistent in the 1.7% range, there have been wide variations in the short-term. We saw that in 2008 and 2009, a time of great economic duress when widespread buying of US Treasuries as a safe haven drove yields down and spreads widened. Those spreads returned to the norm as economic conditions improved.

The current economic situation is very different from the Great Recession. Indeed, but for COVID-19 the strength of the economy earlier in the year would have lead to expectations that the Fed would be increasing rates, rather than the dramatic cuts we saw.

Another factor is the demand for mortgage-backed securities (MBS), the bundles of mortgages sold to investors. In the Great Recession, investors were wary about the value of the underlying security – residential mortgages – and so demanded a larger premium.

Part of the reason that mortgage rates spiked initially in March was that investors stopped buying MBS as they were uncertain about the impact forbearance plans would have on mortgage interest payments. The MBS market recovered when the Fed stepped in as a buyer.

In July I wrote: “We are not going to see mortgage rates fall into line with the 10T + 1.7% formula (implying a FRM of 2.3%) again soon, because in times of economic stress the formula changes slightly to 10T +1.7% + a risk premium. Ideally, the spread would narrow as a result of rising yields on 10T as that would suggest that the economy is growing again.”

The spread has narrowed for a number of reasons and it is air to say that it is now back within a normal range. Which also means that mortgage rates are within a normal range. And cheap as the following chart shows:

Mortgage rates

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Andrew Oliver

REALTOR®

Sagan Harborside Sotheby’s International Realty
One Essex Street | Marblehead, MA 01945
m 617.834.8205
www.OliverReports.com
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