Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Higher rates aid investors, hurt borrowers

-

NEW YORK — Interest rates are climbing, and that can be a good or bad thing depending on whether you’re saving or borrowing. For savers, it’s a longawaite­d win. After years of making virtually nothing on their money market accounts and certificat­es of deposit, savers are finally getting closer to keeping up with inflation. Investors are also getting rewarded with higher interest payments for buying newly issued bonds. For borrowers, though, the math is getting tougher. Loans for a car or house are getting more expensive, and interest rates for credit-card purchases are the highest since 2010. All the increases are a result of higher yields for Treasury notes and bonds. Short-term Treasury yields have been climbing because of the Federal Reserve, which has raised overnight rates six times since late 2015. Longer-term Treasury yields have been slower to rise, but they’ve accelerate­d in recent months. Buy a 10-year Treasury today, and you’ll get more than 3 percent in annual interest, the highest amount since 2011. Of course, rates remain low by historical standards, and mortgages still look ridiculous­ly cheap compared with where they were several decades ago. The average 30-year fixed mortgage is at 4.61 percent, for example. It was more than 18 percent in 1980. Meanwhile, the average rate on a one-year CD for savers with less than $100,000 is just under 0.4 percent. It was more than triple that nine years ago. But that’s better than the 0.2 percent it was crawling at for years. Plus, the best CD rates available at online outfits can top 2 percent. The highest rates for five-year CDs are above 2.5 percent, which is the current rate of inflation, as measured by the consumer price index, including food and energy. Most economists expect interest rates to climb still higher. The economy continues to grow, and higher oil prices are helping to push up inflation. That should keep the Federal Reserve on track for further rate increases: The typical voter on the Fed’s rate-setting committee says the federal funds rate could rise to 2.9 percent next year, up from a range of 1.50 percent to 1.75 percent today. educationa­l and health services sector, which lost 100 jobs from April to April, and the leisure and hospitalit­y sector, which lost 700 jobs over that same period. Hawaii had the lowest unemployme­nt rate in the country in April at 2.0 percent, followed by North Dakota and New Hampshire at 2.6 percent each, Maine at 2.7 percent, and four states tied at 2.8 percent — Iowa, Nebraska, Virginia and Wisconsin. Alaska had the highest unemployme­nt rate at 7.3 percent, followed by New Mexico and West Virginia at 5.4 percent each, and Arizona and Nevada at 4.9 percent each.

 ?? AP file photo ?? Edward Loggie was working on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange as the Federal Reserve announced March 21 that it was raising the benchmark funds rate.
AP file photo Edward Loggie was working on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange as the Federal Reserve announced March 21 that it was raising the benchmark funds rate.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States