Two weeks ago, the Federal Reserve announced a decision to raise the Fed funds rate by 25 basis points. Many housing analysts have expressed fear that this decision will increase mortgage rates, have a negative impact on home affordability, and possibly take the United States housing market recovery off its track. Rick Sharga, Executive Vice President of Ten-X and former Senior Vice President at RealtyTrac, disagrees. He thinks the rise in mortgage rates could in fact prove to be a good thing for the housing market.
Sharga and other industry analysts argue that this decision will cause buyers to move faster and get into the housing market sooner – before rates go any higher. Sharga says he expects this decision will help increase home sales in 2017 or, at the very minimum, encourage buyers who would have normally waited until later in the year to buy a home in the spring and summer months instead.
Sharga also expressed his belief that higher rates will encourage lenders to loosen some of the tight underwriting standards that have plagued the housing market the last few years and prevented many would-be borrowers from moving forward with a purchase.
"This will happen partly just due to higher mortgage interest rates, which will provide a bit of a cushion for lenders to take on a little more risk," Sharga writes in a recent column for housingwire.com. "And higher rates will also drastically reduce the number of refinance loans being issued, which lenders will try to offset by doing more purchase loans."
Sharga thinks the Fed's recent 25-basis-point hike may not actually have a big an impact on mortgage rates.
"The 25-basis-point hike was well within the range that most industry analysts had expected, which means it's possible that this hike won't cause mortgage rates to rise significantly from current levels, which are already the highest they've been in years," Sharga notes.
If Sharga expectations come to fruition, this could equal a scenario with motivated buyers, more relaxed lending standards, minimal mortgage rate increases, and strong wage and job growth, which could result in the strongest spring selling season in several years.