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This article describes the impact of interest rates. A related concept is the Yield Curve.

An interest rate is the cost of borrowing money. Among the many industries affected by fluctuations in interest rates, real estate and banking are perhaps the most directly impacted. When interest rates increase, borrowing becomes more expensive, dampening consumer demand for mortgages and other loan products and negatively affecting residential real estate prices. Rising interest rates can also lead to increased default rates, as holders of adjustable rate debt find themselves faced with higher payments. Vendors of mortgage backed securities, which consist of bundled mortgages, will see their ability to monetize the securities lessens as a result of the deterioration of the quality of the underlying asset.
Interest rates over time
Interest rates over time

At any given time, there are a number of interest rates available in the economy. Interest rates vary across the size, risk, duration, and liquidity of an investment. The interest rates for various durations of investments (short- to long-term) are called the Yield Curve.


Why Interest Rates Rise and Fall

Money Supply and the Fed

Interest rates rise or fall largely as a result of the amount of money in circulation at any given time. The Federal Reserve Bank of the United States affects both short term and long term interest rates by manipulating money supply through open market operations, changing reserve requirements for banks, or changing the rate at which it loans out money to banks. The former involves purchasing large volumes of government securities, in order to increase money supply (driving interest rates down) or selling large quantities of government securities in order to decrease money supply (driving interest rates up). The Fed can also raise the reserve requirement for banks, increasing the amount that banks have to hold against loans, and decreasing the amount that they can loan to the public.

Why the Fed Alters the Interest Rate

Two important factors affecting the Fed's decision to raise rates are inflation and the overall health of the economy. When inflation is too high or increasing too rapidly, the Fed may raise rates in order to slow the economy and trim inflation. Conversely when the economy is doing poorly the Fed may cut rates in order to promote stronger growth at the expense of low inflation.

Recent Actions by the Fed

Following the burst of the tech bubble in 2001, the Fed lowered rates dramatically down to 1%. Years later, in the face of an overheating housing market, the Fed reversed course and raised rates continually through 2006.

Since the last hike in 2006, interest rates have again been repeatedly cut in an attempt to foster economic growth. Particularly, on January 22, 2008, the Fed cut rates by a dramatic 75 basis points, to 3.50%, in a move that came between regularly scheduled Fed meetings in an attempt to stimulate the economy and reassure investors and consumers. At its regularly scheduled meeting just two weeks later, the Fed cut the FFR (Federal Funds Rate) again to 3%.[1] Yet again, on March 18, 2008, the Fed aggressively slashed the FFR by 75bp to 2.25%.[2] Finally, on April 30, 2008, the Fed cut the FFR to a flat 2%, its lowest level in over three years.

However, the consistent slashing did not end there. In response to the growing financial crisis, the Fed once again slashed the FFR to 1.5% on Wednesday, October 8th, the lowest level in over four years.[3] Additionally, central banks in the UK, China, Canada, Sweden, Switzerland, South Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and the European Union all cut their target rates, as governments around the world attempted to restore investor confidence and boost liquidity in the markets. On October 29, less than one month later, the Fed voted unanimously to cut the FFR again, this time to 1%, the lowest level since 2003.[4] December 16, 2008, brought the final rate cut of 2008, a historic 75-basis point slashing of the FFR to .25%.[5] On January 28, 2009, the Fed voted to maintain the FFR at the target range of 0.00% to 0.25%.[6] The Federal Funds has remained at this level. Clearly, cutting further is not an options as a negative funds rate is often seen as an extremely dangerous and unlikely situation.

2007-2008 Federal Funds Rate Cuts
Date New Rate (%)[7] Change from Previous (bp)
Sept 18, 2007 4.75% 50 bp
Oct 31, 2007 4.50% 25 bp
Dec 11, 2007 4.25% 25 bp
Jan 22, 2008 3.50% 75 bp
Jan 30, 2008 3.00% 50 bp
Mar 18, 2008 2.25% 75 bp
Apr 30, 2008 2.00% 25 bp
Oct 8, 2008 1.50% 50 bp
Oct 29, 2008 1.00% 50 bp
Dec 16, 2008 0.25% 75 bp

US Deficit and China

Although far from certain, there is speculation that the United States fiscal deficit can impact interest rates. The Deficit has grown from $5.8 trillion in 2001 to $8.5 trillion in 2006. In order to fund this deficit the government has to issue increasingly large quantities of debt. The government’s continuing demand for money has the potential to crowd out private investors, resulting in higher interest rates. In other words as the government borrows more money, there are fewer funds available to private investors, and as demand exceeds supply, interest rates rise.

China limits the appreciation of its currency by using US dollars gained through its export activities to purchase US debt. By the end of 2006 China held over $649B in US debt. By providing the US government with a willing buyer for its debt issuance and paying for this debt in US dollars, China increases money supply and thereby lowers US interest rates. In recent months, however, both China and Japan have expressed concern about the size of the US deficit. Both countries have hinted that they may look to diversify their currency purchases further. A reduction in the amount of debt purchased by either country could have an impact on US interest rates.

Companies that are hurt by rising interest rates

  • Wachovia, Citigroup, Bank of America, and Washington Mutual derive a large percentage of their income from net interest margin. As interest rates rise, banks are forced to pay higher rates on deposits and other interest bearing accounts. Meanwhile consumer demand for mortgages and other loan products diminishes as borrowing becomes more expensive. The combination of these two effects reduces both the volume of loans and the profitability of each loan. Rising interest rates also have the potential to increase a bank's defaults as holders of adjustable rate mortgages find themselves unable to meet their obligations. This is especially true of Subprime borrowers . Other banks that are negatively impacted are J P Morgan Chase (JPM), SunTrust Banks (STI), Wachovia (WB), and Bank of New York Company (BK).
  • Home Depot (HD) and Lowe's Companies (LOW) sell home construction and improvement materials. When interest rates rise fewer homes are built and fewer home improvement projects are undertaken. Refinancing, a major source of funds for home improvement projects, also becomes more expensive.
  • Vendors of wireless internet services such as Time Warner Cable and Comcast (CMCSA) are harmed by rising interest rates because higher interest rates typically result in lower levels of new home construction. Given the high level of penetration in the existing homes for internet and cable, new home construction represents a critical driver of internet and cable sales.
  • Toll Brothers (NYSE:TOL), Lennar Corp. (NYSE:LEN), and Pulte Homes (NYSE:PHM) are all leading companies in the residential construction industry. Decreased home construction would harm companies such as these due to the reduced demand for their products.
  • Sears Holdings (NASDAQ:SHLD), Whirlpool (NYSE:WHR), General Electric (NYSE:GE), and other appliance manufacturers would likely see decreased demand for home appliances as a result of falling new home construction.
  • Black & Decker (NYSE:BDK) and other companies that manufacture construction tools are largely dependent on new home construction for product demand growth. Lower rates of residential construction would hurt companies such as BDK.
  • Companies that have significant amounts of debt are hurt by higher interest rates, which force the company to spend more money each year to repay their debt. Additionally, companies may find it difficult to refinance their debt if interest rates rise.

Companies that Benefit from Rising Interest Rates

  • Online brokers may be helped by rising interest rates because they benefit from higher net interest margins on deposit accounts. It should be noted, however, that these companies may be hurt if higher rates result in depressed market activity. Companies in this category include Charles Schwab (SCHW), E*TRADE Financial (ETFC) and TD Ameritrade Holding (AMTD) etc.
  • Insurance companies may also benefit from rising interest rates, because much of their profit is earned on the float, the period between when premiums are collected and claims paid out. During this time, insurers invest the premium. Rising interest rates imply a higher return on bonds, one kind of investment, although higher rates lower the value of bonds currently in their portfolio. Large home insurers such as Allstate (ALL) benefit more than do smaller auto insurers like Progressive (PGR) or Geico.

Companies that Benefit from Wider Interest Rate Spreads

Interest rate spread refers to the percentage differential between the risk-free Treasury rate and the rate on other, riskier fixed-income securities. Companies that benefit from wider (i.e. bigger) spreads are:

  • Banks and financial institutions, who borrow and lend at different rates and maturities (e.g., the classic model of borrowing short and lending long). Their net interest income or margin (difference between interest income and expense) is susceptible to yield curve changes, both level and shape.

References

  1. Fed Cuts Rates by Half Point - WSJ.com
  2. AFP: London stocks advance after sharp US rate cut
  3. Fed slashes interest rates, but stocks lose again
  4. The Fed Rate Cut: What You Need to Know - US News and World Report
  5. Tuesday's Rate Cut
  6. January 28, 2009 FOMC Statement
  7. FRB: Monetary Policy, Open Market Operations
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