When to refinance your mortgage as the Federal Reserve cuts rates
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The Federal Reserve cut interest rates by a half percentage point, or 50 basis points, on Wednesday, its first interest rate cut since March 2020. But homeowners shouldn’t bet on the move as an opportunity to immediately refinance their mortgage.
That’s because “a lot of these rate cuts are already priced in,” Chen Zhao, the economic research lead at Redfin, an online real estate brokerage firm, recently told CNBC.
While mortgage rates are partly influenced by the Fed’s policy, they are also tied to Treasury yields and the economy. Home loan rates have already started to come down in recent weeks, slightly induced in part by favorable economic data and indications the Fed could cut rates.
As of Thursday, the average 30-year fixed rate mortgage in the U.S. was 6.20%, according to Freddie Mac data via the Fed. That’s down from this year’s peak of 7.22% on May 2.
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It can be very difficult to perfectly time a mortgage refinance by looking at mortgage rate activity alone, said Jeff Ostrowski, a housing expert at Bankrate.com.
“It’s almost impossible to figure out what mortgage rates are going to do from week to week or month to month,” Ostrowski said.
Yet there are ways homeowners can determine when a refinance makes the most sense to them, experts say, especially if more rate cuts are slated before the end of the year.
Here’s how to know when it’s time to refinance your mortgage, according to experts.
‘This is going to be a much smaller wave’
Refinance activity increased to 46.7% of total applications during the week ending Sept. 6, up from 46.4% the week before, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.
While there has been an increase in refinances as mortgage rates come down, “compared to the massive refinance boom” in 2020 and 2021, “this is going to be a much smaller wave of refinances,” said Ostrowski.
Most homeowners have a mortgage rate below 5%, said Jacob Channel, senior economic analyst at LendingTree.
A refinance will mostly benefit a “small number of people” who bought homes “when rates were at 8%,” said Ostrowski.
Whether it’s smart for homeowners to refinance their mortgage will depend on factors such as their existing borrowing and repayment timeline, experts say.
How to know when it’s time to refinance
If you are thinking about refinancing, look carefully at what’s going on with rates in the market, reach out to lenders and see if doing so now or in the near future makes the most sense for you, Channel said.
“The only person who can decide whether or not refinancing is going to be worth it is you, based on what’s going on in your life,” he said.
Here are three criteria that can help you determine if a refinance makes the most sense to you:
1. You can cut your rate by 50 basis…
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