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
IMBs face ripple effect from recent bank failures
Mar 14, 2023The threat of warehouse-line contractions and margin calls is real for IMBs after a series of bank failures, but not a foregone conclusion, industry experts say.
-
Cooling inflation in February brings hope that Fed rate hikes are over
Mar 14, 2023 -
How the run on banks is affecting the mortgage market
Mar 13, 2023 -
Logan Mohtashami: Did the Fed rate hikes break Silicon Valley Bank?
Mar 13, 2023 -
Logan Mohtashami: Did the Fed rate hikes break Silicon Valley Bank?
Mar 13, 2023 -
Why mortgage rates fell with a stronger jobs report
Mar 10, 2023 -
Impac Mortgage Holdings repositions as broker shop
Mar 10, 2023 -
Is job growth slowing enough for the Fed?
Mar 10, 2023 -
Mortgage rates climb as Fed signals more aggressive rate hikes
Mar 09, 2023 -
Logan Mohtashami: Is the Fed backtracking on more aggressive rate hikes?
Mar 09, 2023 -
The housing market is 6.5 million units short: Realtor.com
Mar 08, 2023 -
Housing Market Tracker: Inventory drops by 11,000
Mar 06, 2023