Summers Sees Fed Rate Projections Upended, Higher Mortgage Rates
Former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers said inflation will probably prevent the Federal Reserve from lowering interest rates as much as expected in coming years.
“The risks of actually going as far with monetary policy as the Fed seems to think that it will are pretty significant in terms of having an increase in inflation,” Summers said on Bloomberg Television’s Wall Street Week with David Westin.
Fed policymakers, in their new projections for their benchmark rate, have a median estimate of 3.4% for the end of next year — reflecting a potential further 1.5 percentage points of cuts on top of the 50 basis points unveiled Wednesday.
Should inflation pressures reemerge, “then you won’t see interest rates go down as much” as officials predicted in their so-called dot plot, said Summers, a Harvard University professor and paid contributor to Bloomberg TV.
He cautioned that investors too are overestimating the amount of Fed easing to come.
Higher Rates
“My suspicion is that there’s some upwards adjustment ahead in longer term rates — perhaps quite significant upwards adjustment in the 10-year rate or the 30-year rate,” he said.
Ten-year Treasury yields were at 3.73% as of 4 p.m. in New York, well down from last year’s high above 5%. Higher yields in time would drive up US mortgage rates, Summers noted. A decline in those borrowing costs have only recently started to fuel demand for home loans, offering hope of a rebound in the housing market.
“The rates that people are now seeing on mortgages may be relatively low compared to what the average of where they’re going to be over the next five years,” Summers said.
Thirty-year fixed-rate mortgages last week were around 6.15%, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association down from 6.78% at the start of the year. They averaged about 4.2% in the half decade before the pandemic.