So now that we know the Federal Reserve hiked interest rates, what does it mean to your finances?
The short answer is “a lot.” But different products will behave differently now … and how they behave down the road will depend on what the Fed does in 2016.
For starters, you should understand exactly what the Fed did. When the Fed “raises rates,” it doesn’t single-handedly raise every single rate in the marketplace. It raises the federal funds rate, which is an overnight rate at which banks borrow money from each other. This time it also raised the discount rate, the rate at which banks borrow directly from the Fed on a short-term basis. Both moves were 25 basis points, or a quarter of a percentage point.
Since the funds rate is a very short-term rate, it has the most direct impact on very short-term Treasuries and very short-term yields. The so-called “prime rate” moves in lock step with Fed hikes. And the 2-year Treasury note (not to mention Treasury bills with maturities of one, three, or six months) are particularly sensitive to current and future Fed moves.
Case in point: Anticipation of a Fed move had already driven the yield on the 2-year note higher. It was at 0.2% a couple years ago, but surged to and through 1% this week for the first time since 2010.
The rates on many Home Equity Lines of Credit (HELOCs) and variable-rate credit cards are tied to the prime rate. The prime rate, in turn, tends to move in lockstep with the funds rate. So you can expect your interest rates on those products to rise by a quarter-point, and the cost of carrying revolving balances on them to rise slightly.
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Rates on short-term Adjustable Rate Mortgages, such as 1-year ARMs, will likely rise slightly in response to the Fed move as well. The same is true for shorter-term auto loans, though it may not be an exact one-for-one increase of 25 basis points.
What about the bread-and-butter 30-year fixed-rate mortgage? That’s where things get a bit trickier. Rates on longer-term mortgages depend much more on how the longer-term portion of the bond market reacts to this Fed move, and expectations about whether it will be followed by a series of future moves.
Investors are somewhat skeptical about the outlook for inflation and economic growth, as well as the Fed’s ability to launch multiple hikes next year. For evidence, just look at how 30-year Treasury Bond yields have behaved.
Investors are skeptical about the outlook for inflation and economic growth, as well as the Fed’s ability to launch multiple hikes next year. |
They fell from almost 4% in January 2014 to around 3% at the end of last year. Then after a brief trip all the way down to 2.25%, they’ve remained anchored around 3% for several months. As a matter of fact, on Fed day, the yield only rose one basis point. So it will clearly take increased optimism about the world economy to really get longer-term mortgage rates rising.
Want some good news? A rising funds rate puts upward pressure on the yields banks offer on Certificates of Deposit. Ditto for money market accounts and money market funds. So you can expect to earn a little more interest on your CDs and keep-safe funds.
Hopefully, this clarifies the outlook for your loans and deposit products in light of the Fed hike. When it comes to potential coping strategies, there are a handful of steps you can take:
* Consider transferring any balances you’re carrying from a variable-rate credit card to a fixed-rate one. Card companies often give you financial incentives to do so anyway.
* If you have a HELOC with a large balance on it, check to see if your bank offers a fixed-rate option. Many institutions allow you to fix the rate and payment on a portion of your balance, often at the cost of only a small fee. That move could protect you from a substantially higher interest bill if we end up getting a series of Fed rate hikes.
* Don’t lock in today’s low yields on long-term savings products like 3-, 4-, or 5-year CDs. Instead, wait to see if we’ll get more Fed hikes as that will boost the yields banks offer on them.
* Regardless of what the Fed does, consider using online-only banks for your term or money market deposits. They tend to pay higher yields because they don’t have physical infrastructure costs to cover by offering lower returns to deposit holders.
This is just a sampling of important pointers and strategies. I’ll have much more on additional post-Fed moves to consider in future columns.
I give more immediate guidance and precise “buy” and “sell” signals in my Interest Rate Speculator service. I’ve been sending out multiple recommendations in recent weeks to profit from increased turmoil in the interest-rate and equity markets, and I’d love to have you on board in light of the renewed Fed focus these days.
Until next time,
Mike Larson
P.S. The United States is now even MORE of a safe haven than ever before. Larry Edelson explains how the Fed’s decision virtually GUARANTEES that the U.S. dollar and U.S. stocks will be in greater demand than ever before.
Click here to read Larry’s special report to find out how to profit from the Fed’s decision in the years ahead.
{ 37 comments }
My wife has $10,000 in her “saving’s account” earning almost nothing in interest. She
refuses to invest it in something that will give her a return. With this 2% rise in interest
will she get something more for her investment? She is 83 years old!
It would sure be nice to see her get “something”. I sure hope so. My IRA investment of 890 shares of General Electric Co, is doing nicely! I am retired and am 81 years old!
Thank you so much for your reply! Ralph W. Weiss, Sr. – 12/18/2015 – 5:37 AM
At 81 you will remember how FDR (a Democrat) saved the country from the Republican Hoover’s Stock Market Crash and Depression… If your wife had invested her $10,000 when Obama took office (2009) after the Second Republican Stock Market Crash and Depression (Cheney/bush) (2007-2009) she would have a really nice nest egg…. Sadly, today’s Republican establishment has been screaming that it would not work, just like they did from 1932 forward… Sadly they have been as wrong from 2009 until now as they were from 1932 forward… :(
a very good point, eagle. the best years in the stock market in my lifetime have been under democrats. i can’t decide which was better – the eight years of clinton, or eight years of obama – but both were outstanding, the best years i ever had. look at the charts and you see the very best years of the market coincided with democrats in the white house. the proof is in the charts.
Then you will enjoy even more “Poor Dumb Rich People ” by Alan Grayson….. Dirt Poor hard working kid who got himself into Harvard on Scholarships… Masters in Economics, then Law Degree… Worked as a Janitor at Harvard all those years…. He is now a successful attorney and a Democratic Representative from Florida… Hint: Average annual return from 1929-Now: Roughly 10% under Democratic Administrations and 0.4% under Republican Administrations…. So much for the “Party of Business”, aye? More like the party of the 3% in my opinion!… :(
all rich people have roots in poverty like alan grayson does. billionaires like buffett, hamm, jobs, etc., all experience abject failure and/or miserable poverty at some point in their lives that motivated them to excel. you can’t succeed until you fail and the greater the failure the greater the success. it’s universal.
hey eagle 4.95 or mike s or whatever your calling yourself these days I see your talking to yourself again
hey eagle 4.95 or mike s or whatever your calling yourself these days I see your talking to yourself again
What about precious metals? No word so far on the potential impact of the Fed’s rate hike on the outlook for bottoming out of PM prices?
If you took the time to look & “investigate” further you would have found that not ONE of the major banks raised the interest rate(s) on deposits….AND do they plan to raise these anytime soon !!!! The community bank board I served on isn’t raising their deposit rates either so this isn’t confined to “the majors.”
we still have dirt-cheap oil, rock-bottom rates, and full employment – a recipe for a good economy. the fed’s mandate is a 2% annual inflation rate, which we can now expect to see. i’m not smart enough to tell you how this translates to gdp, but growth should normalize and that’s exactly what i’d expect to see over the next few years – normal growth.
btw, i’m not the perpetual optimist. i will become the biggest bear in the crowd the day the fed inverts the yield curve, but that’s at least a couple years down the road.
$1,000 gold,
If you look deeply, you will find that most of the 3% that I mentioned earlier come from Ultra Wealthy families, who’s wealth goes back through many generations…. Trump, the Bush’s, Romney and the Koch Brothers are good examples of this….. People like Buffet, Gates and Jobs although wealthy, tend to have not forgotten where they came from and support the mostly Democratic policies that benefit the 97%….. When the plight of the 97% improve, Income Inequity Falls and the Velocity of Money Increases and that brings the economy and the stock market up which agrees with the figures of 10% and 0.4%…
the economy has a life of its own. politicians get credit or take blame for things that happen on their watch that they have little or no control over. someday, history will give obama credit for rescuing america from the depths of the great recession, when in reality he was in the right place at the right time. just like hoover was in the wrong place at the wrong time and was blamed for the great depression. events that would have happen no matter who was in office.
if you want to be a billionaire, grow up in poverty so bad that at times only clothes you have to wear as a child are a pair of underpants. the humiliation of having no clothes is about the strongest motivator i can think of to never be poor again. everyone of these billionaires has a story like this somewhere in their background.
The administration held its nose and bailed out the banks and automakers. It pumped $700 million into the economy when no one else was spending. The fed pumped money into the economy through quantitative easing. Without these efforts things could have been a lot different. Policy does make a difference.
Amen… And VERY TRUE!…
policy is usually reactionary, not proactive. it’s usually not the person or the party in office that caused the problem. it would have happen no matter who what in office.
Eagle495, I’m part of that 97% and a lifelong Republican. Firstly, you should do a little more research on the cause’s of the “Great” Depression. It wasn’t all Hoover’s fault as you imply. Secondly, you me and the rest of the 97% will be shell shocked when our house of cards economy collapse’s again and the effects of our national debt catches up with us. The Democrat motto has always been tax and spend and sadly, many Republican’s have joined them, at least in the spend portion!!!
A lot of things are starting to look like 1928 summer of 29. Farm income then was falling, all through to late 1920’s. Rural was about half the population. Farmers stopped buying equipment. Many of the farmers worked in winter for farm equipment manufacturers. Meant less steel, fewer motors, fewer tires, less wire and so on. That meant less employment in those industries. Today the Middle Class has replaced the farmers and rural residents. However we have more consumer credit than ninety years ago. Means we can buy more today but then can’t always pay for it. Means a lot of money being lost through default. Europe then as now wallowed in debt with the costs of the Kaiser War and the big German economic engine was drowned in reparation payments. Today European countries are head over heels in debt as is this country for its everyday government spending.. Like the old oriental curse “May you live interesting times” I think we are going to be cursed, but I may be wrong, it looks a lot the same as then but it is also different.
Yes, Ted, I fully agree with you, based on stories I’ve heard from my parents and my own study of history.
One big problem today is that few live on the farm any longer…We don’t raise our own food and there is no self-sufficiency anymore. Most of us are completely dependent on whatever we can find in the grocery store. If we go back to times like the days of the great depression, it will be much more difficult today.
Hi Mike
For the debt laden and struggling commodity producers there are warning signs ahead. For the well capitalized and cleverly run producers with long term reserves, then the buying opportunities will become clearer for us.
The two depressions occurred under repub presidents with business backgrounds. Repubs excel at starting perpetual wars based on lies to enrich their military contractor political patrons. They also excel at creating cartels through relentless consolidation to the detriment of all. Drugs, banking, telecom, airlines, food, utilities, cable, health insurers,etc. No competition anywhere anymore and no regulation thanks to repubs/Reagan.
…or maybe those events were already baked in and would have happened no matter who was elected.
Watch out for Qe 4?
only in a dire emergency. expect the opposite. never again will we see qe in our lifetime.
NEVER in the history of America has a Stock Market Crash and Depression ever occurred during the Administration of a Progressive Liberal President… They have ALL happened on the watch of Conservative Presidents…… That is a LOT of years of history to analyse… Happen chance? I think NOT!… :(
democrats like you are really good at cherry picking information you hide the truth and because of BARACK OBAMA and his reckless spending habits the citizens of the united states are now facing a 19 trillion dollar debt mostly accrued under democrats watch here are some facts you don’t want known DEMOCRATS CONTROLLED CONGRESS from 2006 – 2010 AND DEMOCRATS CONTROLLED THE SENATE from 2006 – 2010 if your looking to blame a recession under anyone blame them since their policys from 2006 onward created financial havoc when George bush left we had a national debt that was a little over 10 trillion its doubled under BARACK OBAMA
TYPO…. actually democrats controlled the senate 2006 – 2014
Everyone
When precious metals are mentioned the talk is all about gold.I’d like to hear opinions
on silver. where are the silver people?
Mike,
That was an excellent brief simple explanation. that should be helpful for all of us.
There has been inflation for a long time. Product inflation. Anyone who food shops know that. So here’s the scoop on interest rates. The Chinese currencies will be included in the world basket of value. Their percentage will start at approximately 12% in 2016. This what caused the FED to raise rates. I predict that as the Chinese percentage of world basket increases the FED will be forced to raise interest rates. The hikes might be rapid depending of the impact of the Chinese in the World Basket Currency . So batten down the hatches folks. The English Banks surmise what is happening and foolishly believe that BRIC will make them a full member. The only effect on US Banks will be they will try to plunder more.Don’t be a fool and go for their “cash back” snake oil pitch..It is a sign of their desperation….Avoid debt for the next five years…..Then again what do I know? I had to leave third grade to work in the fields.
LBJ started ramping up war on Vietnam as soon as he became president. We all know how profitable that was if you owned Bell helicopter, etc. He was democrat btw. What a waste.
Thanks for the insight but I do not think the politics are appropriate: you always end up offending half your audience.
Nobody has mentioned that Western governments are fixed on getting us to a cashless society. Your bank is only required to hold about 3% of your deposits in cash. The rest is invested in “investments” in just about any assets. Suppose you have a large $100,000 account in your bank and wish to withdraw $10,000 or more in CASH. All I can say is GOOD LUCK. You will quickly realize two important facts of life: 1) you are nothing more than an UNSECURED creditor of your bank; 2) you will immediately understand the profound difference between cash in your bank and cash in your pocket.
Are you saying that if someone has 100,000 in the bank and they want to take it out to put it down on a home or something else, they can’t do it?
How can interest rates go up? ( if they go-up on T-bills all that scared money rush in to get the high yields and down they go ).