Where Will Interest Rates Head in 2016?
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For most of 2015, long-term interest rates hovered around 4 percent before a run of five months in the 3.5 to 4 percent range. And then on New Year’s Eve, rates inched back above 4 percent. That move was accompanied by a prediction from Freddie Mac’s chief economist Sean Becketti that rates could be averaging 4.7 percent by the end of 2016, a level that long-term rates haven’t seen in years.
Naturally, this move has UrbanTurf and local buyers wondering where rates will be headed this year. We asked a few local lenders to look into their crystal ball and give us their prediction.
Rates Will Stay in The Low to Mid-4 Percent Range
John Downs, Caliber Home Loans – Downs Capital Partners
Interest rates have certainly been the top conversation of the year as we counsel home buyers and our real estate partners. Generally speaking, the bias is towards rates rising however I’m not really sold on that. In 2014, every analyst was predicting higher rates and they ended up being wrong. There isn’t an easy answer as to why it didn’t happen. The global markets are wound so tightly together that we are no longer trading on just the U.S. economy. With the free flow of global money, our bonds look very appealing, especially as the dollar strengthens and short term yields rise with the Fed.
I believe that rates will stay in a very narrow range (low to mid-4 percent) for most of 2016. Inflation pressures are just too stagnant with oil prices continuing to stay depressed coupled with a lack of strong wage growth in the employment markets. Global growth concerns continue to plague the equity markets with uncertainty which should also give a boost to the bond markets.
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The Global Economy Will Keep Rates Low
Patrick Gardner, 1st Portfolio Lending
The higher rate prediction from Freddie Mac is common, particularly with the recent Fed rate increase. However, they’ve had higher interest rate predictions for the last few years because everyone knows they have to increase at some point to move off of unsustainable low rates. The fact that they’ve been incorrect is simply because the economy is not as strong as they had predicted or hoped. I think this holds true again in 2016 and while rates may be volatile and rise to 4.7 percent temporarily, rates will average lower over the course of the year as the global economy struggles forward.
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This article originally published at http://dc.urbanturf.production.logicbrush.com/articles/blog/where_will_interest_rates_head_in_2016/10733.
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