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Homebuyers beware: Wall Street predicts a barrage of mega interest-rate hikes just as mortgage costs begin to soar

Wall Street is buzzing over the shift in Federal Reserve policy—the era of loose, rock-bottom interest rates is out. In are a series of rate hikes as the central bank tries to put the clamps on spending and cool off inflation.

The policy move is designed to have a huge impact on borrowing, too, and we’re already seeing the fallout in mortgage rates, with 30-year mortgages crossing the 5% line yesterday, the first time since 2013. The central bank does not set mortgage rates, but its monetary policy more directly impacts 10-year Treasuries. Mortgage rates closely follow the trend line in long-dated Treasuries.

How high could interest rates ultimately go?

Following publication of the Federal Open Market Committee minutes yesterday, BofA Securities published an investor note saying the investment bank now predicts Jerome Powell and his colleagues will trigger a series of three consecutive 50-basis-point hikes at the May, June, and July meetings. After that, BofA economists see 25-basis-point hikes in every meeting stretching out to May 2023. When the dust clears, they see the Federal funds rate tripling from today’s level to the 3.25–3.50% range, all of which could ultimately add further turmoil to an already volatile U.S. housing market.

“Markets are close to our view,” write BofA economists Ethan Harris and Aditya Bhave. Here’s their chart:

The markets will also be closely watching QT, short for quantitative tightening. During the pandemic, the Fed bought up trillions in Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities to keep the economy from falling off a cliff during lockdowns. Yesterday, the Fed confirmed it will be winding down its $9 trillion balance sheet, meaning the whale of whales is finally getting out of the market in a big way. The central bank has signaled it’s likely to simply let the maturing Treasury notes it holds to mature, and then decide not to roll them over. But for mortgage-backed securities (MBS) it’s exploring an outright sale of at least a portion of these assets.

The Dallas Fed last year showed that the Fed’s MBS buying spree did push down mortgage rates for homebuyers, at least in the short term. The impact of the move, though, takes time to show up in the form of a change to mortgage rates.

What prospective homebuyers may want to keep an eye on is Treasuries, and that measure is looking iffy. Yesterday’s Fed move did succeed in pushing the 10-year Treasury to an intraday high of 2.656%, a level last reached in 2019, according to Deutsche Bank.

Fortune’s Lance Lambert did the math on what rising mortgages mean for borrowers. Consider that on a 30-year mortgage carrying a 4.67% interest rate (reminder: It touched above 5% yesterday), a borrower who took out $400,000 would be on the hook for a monthly payment of $2,067.

In other words, expect more volatility in the housing market.

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

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