30-Yr. Fixed Conforming. Updated hourly during market hours.
Single family homes on the market. Updated weekly.Powered by Altos Research
Market yield on U.S. treasury securities at 10-year constant maturity. Updated daily.Data sourced from FRED

Federal Reserve

Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said in December that the Fed will accelerate the tapering of its bond-buying program beginning in January, and is planning seven rate hikes over the next two years -including three in 2022, alone – causing an increase in mortgage rates.

By November 2021, the Fed had bought over $4 trillion worth of treasuries and other securities. It began scaling back total purchases by $15 billion per month in November, and then doubled its taper to $30 billion per month to help fight inflation, or at least slow its rise. The faster wind-down puts the Fed on track to conclude the bond purchases – which are aimed at pushing down long-term rates, such as for mortgages – by March instead of June.

The Fed had viewed sharply rising prices as temporary, attributing them to COVID-19-related supply and demand imbalances. But at a December congressional hearing, Chairman Powell predicted the supply chain issues would likely continue well into 2022.

Fed officials now predict the economy will grow 4% in 2022, an increase from their prior 3.8% estimate. They predict the unemployment rate will drop to 3.5% by the end of 2022, which they had also previously projected to be 3.8%.

Latest Posts

Mortgage servicing foreclosure review faults subpar regulation 

Apr 29, 2014By

When it came to the $6 billion set aside for foreclosure prevention actions, the GAO found that the Fed and OCC did not define specific objectives for what was to be done with the money. Instead, the regulators negotiated with the servicers and identified broad objectives, including “that actions be meaningful and that borrowers be kept in their homes.”

What's New?Updated 1 week ago
manage feed