There are several types of interest rates.
These include:
- Prime rate: The
interest rate banks charge their best (prime) customers.
- Treasury bill rates: Treasury
bills are short-term debt instruments used by the U.S.
Government to finance their debt. Commonly called T-bills,
they mature in less than one year.
- Treasury Notes: Intermediate-term
debt instruments used by the U.S. Government to finance
their debt. They mature in one to ten years.
- Treasury Bonds: Long
debt instruments used by the U.S. Government to finance
its debt. Treasury bonds mature in more than ten years.
- Federal Funds Rate: Banks
with excess reserves at a Federal Reserve district bank
charge this rate to other member banks for overnight
loans.
- Federal Discount Rate: The
interest rate the Federal Reserve charges its member
banks for short-term borrowing to meet liquidity needs.
- Libor: : London
Interbank Offered Rates. Average London Eurodollar rates.
- 6-month CD rate: The
average rate that you get when you invest in a 6-month
CD.
- 11th District Cost of Funds: A
weighted average of the actual interest expenses incurred
for a given month by the savings institutions headquartered
in the 11th District of the Federal Home Loan Bank System.
- Fannie Mae Backed Security rates: Fannie
Mae pools large quantities of mortgages, creates securities
with them, and sells them as Fannie Mae backed securities.
The rates on these securities influence mortgage rates
very strongly.
- Ginnie Mae-Backed Security rates: Ginnie
Mae pools large quantities of mortgages, securitizes
them and sells them as Ginnie Mae-backed securities.
The rates on these securities influence mortgage rates
on FHA and VA loans.
Interest rate
movements are influenced by the fundamental forces of supply
and demand. Given a fixed level of lendable funds, if the
demand for credit (loans) increases, interest rates also
increase. I.e., when more people (borrowers) bid for a
limited resource (money) the cost of that resource increases.
Conversely, if the demand for credit decreases, so will
interest rates as lenders lower the cost to entice borrowing.
When the economy expands there is a higher demand for credit
and interest rates increase. When
the economy contracts, the demand for credit lessens and
interest rates decrease.
A fundamental concept:
Bad news (i.e. a slowing economy) is
good news for interest rates (i.e. lower rates).
Good news (i.e. a growing economy) is
bad news for interest rates (i.e. higher rates).
A major factor driving interest rates is
inflation. Higher inflation is associated with a growing
economy. When the economy grows too rapidly, the Federal
Reserve increases interest rates to slow the economy and
reduce inflation. Inflation is the increase in the general
level of prices for goods and services. When the economy
is strong there is more demand for goods and services, so
the producers of those goods and services can increase prices.
A strong economy therefore results in higher real-estate
prices, higher rents on apartments and higher mortgage rates.
Mortgage rates tend to move in the same
direction as interest rates. However, actual mortgage rates
are also based on supply and demand for mortgages. The supply/demand
equation for mortgage rates may be different from the supply/demand
equation for interest rates. This might sometimes result
in mortgage rates moving differently from other rates. For
example, one lender may be forced to close additional mortgages
to meet a commitment they have made. This results in them
offering lower rates even though interest rates may have
moved up!
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