The housing market's leading trade groups are pleading with the Federal Reserve to publicly project calm to help stabilize "painful and unprecedented"
The Mortgage Bankers Association, the National Association of Home Builders and the National Association of Realtors wrote Monday to Fed Chairman Jerome Powell, urging the central bank to make two statements. The Fed, the groups say, should declare it's not contemplating further rate hikes and that it won't sell off mortgage-backed securities
"We urge the Fed to take these simple steps to ensure that this sector does not precipitate the
The groups' letter came a day before a top Fed official Tuesday
Powell last month, speaking after the Fed's
The 10-year Treasury was 4.6% on Sept. 30, a 16-year high, according to Freddie Mac. That figure helped to push mortgage rates last week to 7.49%, a level not seen since 2000. Mortgage application activity meanwhile was down 18.5% year-over-year last week and hit its lowest level since 1996,
The groups wrote Monday the yield curve's historic highs indicated "deep-seated uncertainty" about the Fed's next move.
The current spread is creating mortgage rates for homebuyers at least 120 basis points higher than they otherwise would be, the letter said. The groups estimate the spread equates to an extra $245 in monthly payments on a standard $300,000 mortgage.
The Fed, meanwhile, is allowing $35 billion in MBS to run off its books, and as of last Wednesday had $2.4 trillion in MBS assets, according to data
Shelter costs were up 7.3% alongside consumer prices up 3.7% in August, according to a Consumer Price Index report. Shelter inflation was responsible for 90% of the consumer price gains in July, the letter highlighted. Rents, like home prices, also
Today's lending conditions have also impacted servicers,
David Stevens, a former MBA leader and CEO of Mountain Lake Consulting, and Scott Olson, executive director of the Community Home Lenders of America, also called on the Fed to buy long-term mortgages. In addition, they suggest Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac's preferred stock purchase agreements should be amended to allow for expanded mortgage purchases, albeit temporary.
"Everyone expects rates and spreads to decline; so concerns about interest rate risk are very limited, and chances are the GSEs would make a profit by doing so," the leaders wrote.
The FOMC will meet Oct. 30.