So, the 'expert' opinion is that mortgage rates will only go up by 0.25%-0.75% after the fed stops its program of monetizing MBS in March, according to this article in the Financial Times. On the other hand, Morgan Stanley estimates that "the Fed's purchase of $1.6T in bonds last year left just $200B of debt for the private sector to absorb." On top of this, non-performing loans are still doing their moon-shot:
![](http://www.itulip.com/forums/attachment.php?attachmentid=2718&d=1263246209)
So, I am suffering some cognitive dissonance. The empirical reasons given in the article to believe the impact on mortgage rates might be slight seem fairly straight-forward (the market should be pricing in the end of the Fed's QE program, and there hasn't been much of a leap yet). On the other hand, I have a hard time understanding why there will be much appetite for fresh mortgages. Maybe the answer is that new mortgages are being underwritten with much better standards, and so should be of higher quality. Were there really only $1.25T worth of really crappy mortgages out there in need of monetization?
So, I am suffering some cognitive dissonance. The empirical reasons given in the article to believe the impact on mortgage rates might be slight seem fairly straight-forward (the market should be pricing in the end of the Fed's QE program, and there hasn't been much of a leap yet). On the other hand, I have a hard time understanding why there will be much appetite for fresh mortgages. Maybe the answer is that new mortgages are being underwritten with much better standards, and so should be of higher quality. Were there really only $1.25T worth of really crappy mortgages out there in need of monetization?
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