Earlier this year, there was some confidence that long term mortgage rates may get below 6% by the end of the year. It seemed at this time the Fed found the magic formula to tame inflation while achieving that soft landing for the economy but stubborn inflation date followed with an uptick in mortgage rates. Now end of the year predictions are just a field in the high fives to low 7s depending who you ask. Many are fixed on the Fed’s next interest rate move after this week’s bank failures. A freeze in rate hikes would provide short term relief but be harmful in the long term as inflation is still sticky. The Fed’s uncharacteristically blunt message to date is there will be pain in the quest to calm inflation. Obviously, we feel that pain in the real estate world and SVB bank failure is another example. My guess is the fed will hold true to their message and at least do a .25 hike. And, I think that is a good sign for our economy: the fed has the right tools to steer out of a pandemic, handle bank failures, a war and supply chain issues without sending our economy into a tailspin. In the real estate world the giddy days are behind us but that’s a good thing in the big picture. We need more supply and affordable home ownership.