



Trump’s grand plan for housing relies on his Fed pick. Here’s why.
Subscribe to enjoy similar stories. So much for a quiet first week of the new year. President Donald Trump is looking to micromanage various sectors of the market, but his pick for Federal Reserve chair remains the most important economic intervention the president can make.
Housing costs are one of the chief concerns for Americans. After targeting house prices with the proposal to ban institutional investors from buying family homes, now Trump is hoping to push down mortgage rates by getting Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to buy $200 billion in mortgage bonds, almost doubling their current holdings. It’s another sweeping government intervention by a Republican administration that is supposed to be an advocate of free markets.
Tackling housing has advantages over some of the other sectors that have attracted the president’s attention in having few apparent legal obstacles, while the benefits could be seen relatively quickly. Analysts at UBS estimate such purchases could reduce the current 30-year headline mortgage rate to around 6.0% from around 6.21% currently. The acquisitions wouldn’t breach the cap on Fannie and Freddie’s holdings.
Traders are rushing to get ahead of White House policy, bidding up shares of house-flipper Opendoor Technologies and mortgage lender Rocket Cos. in premarket trading, Friday, as well as the home-builder sector more generally. But with home prices up more than 50% nationally since 2019 and mortgage rates having more than doubled since the lows of 2021, it could need something extra to get the housing market moving again.
Read on livemint.com