Homebuyers are stuck as mortgage rates defy Fed’s rate cut

Homebuyers are stuck as mortgage rates defy Fed’s rate cut

?? Welcome to Trendlines. The secret word is "Great Pumpkin."

I'm Boston Globe Media financial columnist Larry Edelman, and today I look at why prospective homebuyers will have to wait a while for mortgage rates to retreat.

Plus: Boston's new soccer team draws a red card.


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In Greater Boston, the median price of a single-family home rose 3.5 percent last month to $730,000, The Warren Group, a real estate data firm, reported on Wednesday. (Peter Morgan/AP)

Mortgage grind

It’s been a month since the Federal Reserve shifted from fighting inflation with high interest rates to supporting the job market with the first in what is expected to be a series of rate cuts.

The impact? It’s been pretty much as expected: a boost for stock market investors and so-so news for savers. But for prospective homebuyers, it’s brought more frustration: Mortgage rates have actually risen in recent weeks.

  • Perhaps the biggest surprise since the Fed cut its short-term lending rate by half a percentage point was the September jobs report. It showed a rebound in hiring that eased recession fears.

  • But the pickup also increased the likelihood that, with the job market on solid footing, the central bank will have the flexibility to lower borrowing costs gradually. That’s not what anyone looking to buy a home really wants to hear with mortgage rates well above 6 percent.

??? What’s happening

Mortgage rates, which fell in anticipation of the Fed’s move, have since reversed direction, reflecting expectations that the Fed would not rush additional rate reductions.

  • The average 30-year fixed rate home loan was 6.6 percent on Wednesday, according to Mortgage Daily News, up from 6.1 on Sept. 17, the day before the Fed’s rate cut.

  • Even though the current rate is well below the peak of 8 percent a year ago, affordability — the combination of sale prices and mortgage costs — is the lowest it’s been since at least the early 1980s, Goldman Sachs research shows.

?? Why it matters

With so many homeowners having locked down low-rate mortgages before the rise in rates, inventories of homes for sale are tight. That has kept prices rising.

  • In Greater Boston, the median price of a single-family home rose 3.5 percent last month to $730,000, The Warren Group, a real estate data firm, reported on Wednesday. (The median is the price at which half the homes were more expensive and half were less expensive.) The number of homes changing hands edged up 2 percent.

  • Statewide, the median home price jumped 6.2 percent, to $600,000, as sales fell 3.7 percent.

?? Final thought

Goldman Sach is forecasting prices to rise 4.4 percent in 2025, compared with 4.5 percent this year and a longer-term average of 5 percent. Mortgage rates will decline, but incrementally.

  • “We believe we’re well past the peak in mortgage rates, and we think it’s going to be a slow but steady grind lower over the coming years,” Goldman Sachs research analyst Vinay Viswanathan said in an article posted last month by the firm.

A steady grind is hardly a welcome forecast for would-be homeowners who have already been through the wringer.

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Bad call. (Boston Unity Soccer Partners)

? The Closer

Own goal. Offside. Relegated.

Pick your favorite soccer term to describe the wrong-footed marketing moves by BOS Nation FC, the city's just-named National Women's Soccer League franchise.?

The team pulled its "Too Many Balls" advertising campaign after it was roundly slammed as inappropriate, tone-deaf, transphobic, and gender essentialist.

  • “Fans of the future Boston NWSL team were struck with horrifying news — the leadership of this organization not only want to market this professional women’s soccer team by yammering about testicles, but they are also giving us a cringey name completely devoid of regional identity," wrote Katya Engalichev, 25, of New Hampshire, in the intro to her online petition calling on the team's owners to allow fans to vote on a better moniker.

"No one calls Boston 'BOS' even when referring to the airport," said one of the more than 1,400 signers of the petition. "A cringe worthy generic yet presumptuous name," wrote another.

I believe BOS Nation has spoken.?


Thanks for reading. I will be back on Monday. If you’d like to get my expanded business newsletter via email, sign up at globe.com/trendlines.

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