Greg, the great research authority that is CNBC is definitely doing a good job of trying to show how things are looking a lot like 2006. The house I bought in 2006 (in Arkansas, not CA) came with a 6% interest rate. It wasn't a bad deal, even though the one I have now is at 4%. As the mortgage bubble burst, rates went up, along with gas prices and everything else; Priuses were being bought above market, and dealers in the Midwest were literally giving away Dodges and Chryslers (if you bought one). Everything's a pattern that can be found in the past (as your experience has undoubtedly demonstrated), short of trying to track Goldman Sachs' trading algorithms . . .
It would be interesting to see the world with the crazy interest rates from the late 1970s/early '80s. The thing about that would be a completely different economy . . .
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Originally Posted by GregWeld
Not to argue with you.... but you don't apparently understand the correlation of FED rates and the subsequent market rates that it affects.
A "quarter point" rise won't affect home sales could possibly be correct - except that real actual mortgage rates will go up MORE than that... and since the FED is talking about possibly raising rate FOUR TIMES this year - that would be ONE full point this year alone....
The FED FUNDS rate affects every single thing you do.... food prices - cost of doing business - cost of borrowing - credit card rates. What happens - eventually - your car payment goes up - your insurance costs go up - your food prices rise - and your mortgage payment rises. That creates INFLATION - which then causes businesses to have to increase their prices to cover the rising costs of everything they do... Rates are incredibly important.
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