New Fed sheriff forecasts higher rates rates in 2026
There’s a new Fed Sheriff in town, and analysts say home buyers’ hopes and dreams for lower mortgage rates in 2026 likely will remain in interest-rate jail.
In his first
Early in March, 12 of 19 voting Fed officials expected at least one rate cut this year, and no one anticipated hikes. Last week’s forecast looked almost nothing like that.
Nine officials now expect at least one quarter of one percentage-point increase in rates by year-end. Eight see rates unchanged. Only one still penciled in a cut. Chairman Warsh didn’t even bother to vote. The median projection now points to an interest-rate hike in 2026. Analysts said the policy statement was “notably terser” and shorter than anything produced under former Fed chairman
In its place: ‘‘the Fed committee will deliver price stability.” Gone too was the so-called easing bias the conditional language that had outlined the circumstances under which the Fed might consider cutting rates. ño replacement language was offered by Warsh.
The Fed’s “Summary of Economic Projections” shows no rate reduction expected in 2026, with the policy-funds rate now seen ending the year at 3.8%, up from the March projection of 3.4%. The rate path beyond that also shifted higher 3.6% in 2027 and 3.4% in 2028, compared with prior estimates of 3.1% for both years. The longer-run rate holds at 3.1%.
What do all these forecast numbers translate into for wouldbe
Home buyers can continue to dream of homeownership and that white picket fence in the future, or buy this year and likely pay an interest rate of 6.5% to a high of 7.25% for a 30-year fixed loan. Rate creep coming?
If lenders buy into the ceasefire agreement and the reopening of the strait, that could alleviate some of those pressures and help bring the yield down over the balance of the year, analysts said.
Warsh emphasized that policymakers are “unambiguous and unanimous” in their commitment to restoring price stability after almost six years of inflation run- ning above the Fed’s 2% fantasy target. When
With the labor market still holding up, the central bank appears to believe it has room to stay the course without immediately destabilizing employment.
Experts said extended inaction on future rate adjustments by the Fed would be historically unusual. Outside of periods like the COVID plague, when the Fed-funds rate was effectively at zero, the Fed’s Open Market Committee hasn’t gone a full calendar year since 1993 without adjusting rates.
“Higher interest rates raise the cost of capital, slow discretionary spending, compress margins, and pressure equity valuations,” said commercial loan specialist
Benchmark rates decline Despite all the gloomy interestrate news coming out from the Fed, on
However, analysts noted that the Freddie Mac survey runs a week behind the ‘real-time’’ home-loan market, so the Fed’s outlook had not yet been fully digested by lenders.
“Nationwide, incoming data continues to reflect a resilient consumer, with pending home sales strengthening, and purchase demand continuing to modestly improve,” said
On
The survey is focused on conventional, conforming, fully amortizing home-purchase loans for borrowers who place 20% down and have excellent credit.
However, the cheerful housing report by Freddie Mac’s Khater, does not align with the reality of Chicago’s
In May, median resale home prices rose a hefty 14.5% to
“‘As we move into early summer, the market is expected to remain supply-constrained and continued price growth is expected,” noted Irwin. Only 691 homes were sold in May, down slightly from May of 2025, and new listings declined 20.4% to 904 properties.
The market analysis covers the
Impact of Iran War The Iran War, launched in March, has had a major impact on the market, pushing mortgageinterest rates sharply higher, analysts report. “Prior to the
However, conventional mortgages rates rose between 0.5% [half of one percentage point] and 0.375% to around 6.5% as a direct result of the Iran War and other economic factors.
“Significant geopolitical uncertainty exists, and until there is a long-term resolution we will continue to see elevated rates,” Rose predicted. ‘‘The markets and traders have interpreted new Fed chairman’s comments as forecasting a rate hike later this year, Rose said. ‘‘In my opinion, I do not see mortgage rates going below where they were earlier this year.”’ Outside of paying extra fees for a rate buydown, Rose doesn’t see many options for people seeking a below-market deal. “Obviously, a good credit score [above 750] always helps, and there are some incentives for first time home buyers,” he said.
On the positive side, Rose noted that first-time borrowers in
‘‘It practically equates to an interest rate cut of about a 0.375% of 1% under the market mortgage rate compared with borrowers whose income is above the threshold,” explained Rose, who can be contacted via email at jeremy.rose@stonehavenmtg. com.
For more housing news, visit www.dondebat.biz.


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