Federal Reserve
The Federal Reserve started a rate-cutting cycle on Sept. 18, 2025, lowering its benchmark interest rate by 50 basis points (bps) to a range of 4.75% to 5%. The cut was the first since March 2020 after the Fed raised interest rates to a 23-year high point to cool the economy and quell inflation. The Fed cut rates two more times in 2024, each by 25 basis points. It has not cut interest rates so far in 2025.
Latest Posts
Housing demand is still positive even with epic snowstorm
Feb 01, 2026Despite a major snowstorm and Fed news, housing data stayed positive as mortgage rates held near 6% and purchase apps rose 18% year over year.
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Mortgage rate relief under Warsh may prove elusive, experts say
Jan 30, 2026 -
President Trump says he wants to keep home prices high, lower borrowing costs
Jan 30, 2026 -
Trump nominates Kevin Warsh to replace Powell as Fed chair
Jan 30, 2026 -
Trump to announce new Fed chair Friday, sending the 10-year yield higher
Jan 29, 2026 -
Fed holds rates steady as political pressure overshadows policy decisions
Jan 28, 2026 -
Mortgage rates steady ahead of Fed meeting as eyes turn to spring housing market
Jan 27, 2026 -
Supreme Court appears skeptical of Trump’s bid to remove Fed’s Lisa Cook
Jan 21, 2026 -
Mortgage rate volatility returns ahead of Trump’s Davos speech
Jan 20, 2026 -
DOJ investigation clouds future of Fed chair nomination
Jan 16, 2026 -
Housing activity weakens in latest Fed Beige Book report
Jan 15, 2026 -
Mortgage rates fall near 6% with GSEs set to boost MBS purchases
Jan 13, 2026