Many people think that higher interest rates are to blame for the “lock-in effect” in the U.S. housing market, but they say that higher rates should not be called inflationary.
Since low 30-year fixed-rate mortgages from the pandemic era provide financial security, fewer homeowners have been willing to sell, trade up, or refinance in the last two years. This is especially true since the Federal Reserve has decided to keep interest rates higher for longer than expected in 2024.
More and more people are angry about the lock-in trend, which is making “fringe” arguments more popular. For example, some say that the Fed’s higher rates have “bid up housing prices,” but Ned Davis Research analysts Alejandra Grindal and London Stockton don’t believe this.
It has been a problem for a few years, during both low and high interest rate periods, that there aren’t enough homes for sale, the Ned Davis team wrote in a client note on Friday to disprove the inflationary theory.
“Even though the Fed’s tight monetary policy hasn’t had as strong of an effect on prices, that doesn’t mean that tighter policy is more inflationary.”
For the first time in about a month, mortgage rates fell below 7% last week. The affordability crisis for first-time buyers has been made worse by high rates. However, as Aarthi Swaminathan of MarketWatch wrote, sales will likely need both lower rates and more new homes on the market to get back on track.
The Ned Davis analysts put together a chart showing how housing supply has been pinched for years before the Fed started hiking interest rates in 2022.

It was the first time in history that the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) crossed the 40,000-point mark. In May, stocks hit new record highs. Investors were hoping that recent low inflation readings would make it possible for the Fed to lower interest rates.
In particular, the April consumer-price index that came out in mid-May showed that the yearly rate of inflation had gone down a little to 3.4%. Shelter inflation, on the other hand, was set at 5.5%.
But on Thursday, worries about rates came back. The Dow dropped 600 points, one day after the Federal Reserve released minutes from its May policy meeting, which showed that more rate hikes might still be possible to control inflation. The central bank wants the yearly rate to go back down to its goal of 2%.
Even though stocks went up on Friday before the Memorial Day weekend, the market had a mixed week overall. FactSet data showed that the Dow was expected to fall 2.2% over the next week, while the S&P 500 SPX was expected to stay about the same and the Nasdaq Composite COMP was expected to rise 1.4% over the next week.
Parts of the stock market that were affected by interest rates were going to lose a lot of money. For example, the real estate sector of the S&P 500 (XX:SP500.60) was down 3.6% for the week.
That will probably keep investors glued to next week’s economic data so they can figure out what the Fed is trying to say about rates. The next important measure of inflation will be the Fed’s preferred personal-consumption expenditures price index for April, which will come out in four weeks.