Mortgage Rates Hold Steady
Markets were calm this week as initial worries over bank earnings and balance sheets were better than anticipated. Bank of America’s CEO, Brian Moynihan, provided comfort to the market with his commentary on the consumer, the state of the banks, and his explanation of why money is moving out of the banking system to higher-yielding and safe instruments such as Treasuries. In short, the outflow of money from banks is what the Fed wants to see. In our highly leveraged economy, money flowing from the banking system will tighten the amount of available credit and require banks to offer more yield to keep depositors. This keeps interest rates on mortgages elevated. As a result, there is less money in the economy, which should slow demand and help cool off inflation. It sounds simple, but the twist comes with timing. Fed policy works with long and variable lags, so any policy initiated many months ago may only now be impacting the economy. That is why many are calling for a pause to rate hikes to see what may come from the jumbo move in short-term rates over the last year. However, betting markets believe the Fed will raise rates another .25 basis points in May as Fed officials continue to advocate for further tightening in its inflation fight. With service inflation remaining sticky and business activity picking up, we too believe the Fed will go for one more hike.
Nevertheless, there are many mixed signals that suggest the economy is cooling. Auto sales and housing have certainly slowed (yet builder stocks are near all-time highs, go figure). While loan defaults across commercial, auto, and consumer credit remain low, default rates are rising, as are spreads. The MOVE index, a measure of bond volatility, is very high, which is never a good sign. Weekly jobless claims point to more layoffs ahead. Let’s not lose sight that a strong sign of a looming recession remains with the inverted yield curve. In addition, banks are limiting the lending box in anticipation of a slowing economy, lack of deposit growth, and in response to the SVB and Signature Bank failures.
Smaller Lenders Are Better
As big banks tighten the lending box on residential mortgages, Insignia Mortgage is locating eager to lend sources like smaller banks and credit unions. We recently partnered with a local, federally-insured institution, with an old-fashioned way of doing business. This lender looks at each scenario case by case and then makes a decision. Interest rates are in the low 5’s for a 5/1 ARM, and this particular lender will offer a loan amount of up to $4 million dollars at 80% of appraised value. No banking relationship is required. We like these lenders because they are community-oriented and far easier to deal with than the bigger banks. Their interests are aligned with ours and most especially, our clients. Every deal matters to these smaller lenders fighting for market share against the bigger banks.