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Mortgage Rates Plunge as Government Plans Bond Buying—Here’s How It Works

Andrew Moran by Andrew Moran
January 10, 2026
in Curated, Opinions
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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Mortgage Rates

(The Epoch Times)—President Donald Trump wants the federal government to purchase mortgage-backed securities to help restore housing affordability.

The current administration has proposed a range of ideas to help young families achieve homeownership, including bringing down mortgage rates, and banning large institutional investors from buying residential homes.

Here’s how the president’s latest idea surrounding mortgage bonds would work.

Understanding Mortgage-Backed Securities

A mortgage-backed security (MBS) is a bond comprised of home loans.

Thousands of individual mortgages are pooled into a single investment, and the homeowners’ monthly payments are passed through to the investors who hold it.

The two most common are agency and non-agency mortgage-backed securities.

The former is backed by government-sponsored enterprises (GSE), including Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and Ginnie Mae. The latter is an investment that is not guaranteed by the federal government but rather issued by banks, mortgage lenders, and other private institutions.

Investors are attracted to mortgage-backed securities because they yield higher income than government bonds, and agency investment vehicles carry less credit risk than corporate bonds.

Trump’s Proposal

In a Jan. 8 Truth Social post, the president directed the purchase of $200 billion in mortgage bonds to restore housing affordability.

“This will drive Mortgage Rates down, monthly payments down, and make the cost of owning a home more affordable,” Trump wrote on his social media platform.

Bill Pulte, director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency and chairman of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, confirmed on X that his agency will carry out the president’s proposal.

Fannie and Freddie, which have been under federal control since the 2008 Global Financial Crisis, “will do the purchases,” he said.

“We are on it, Mr. President!” Pulte said in a later X post.

This would be a drop in the bucket compared to the wider market, though. U.S. mortgage bonds are valued at approximately $11 trillion, accounting for the majority of the global market.

How This Lowers Interest Rates

The idea behind Trump’s plan is to bolster demand for mortgage-backed securities, raising their prices and pushing yields lower—bonds trade inversely—leading to falling mortgage rates.

Trump’s proposal has already led to results in the mortgage market.

As of Jan. 9, the average 30-year fixed-rate mortgage reached 5.99 percent, down 22 basis points from the previous day, according to the Mortgage News Daily Index. This marked the lowest level since August 2022.

The volatility is likely to persist, says Matthew Graham, COO of Mortgage News Daily.

“The MBS market continues sorting out a huge reaction to the GSE purchase news. Rates are definitely quite a bit lower,” Graham said in a report. “It remains to be seen how much lower they’ll be when the initial volatility settles down—something that will probably require more clarity on the specifics of the MBS buying plan.”

That said, mortgage rates generally track the U.S. Treasury market, specifically the 10-year yield. The benchmark Treasury yield has fallen by about 50 basis points over the last 12 months, to below 4.2 percent.

Experts’ Expectations

Estimates vary among industry experts regarding how much impact the president’s proposal, if realized, will have on the mortgage market.

Chao Zhen, head of economics research at Redfin, projects the move will bring mortgage rates down between 10 to 15 basis points.

“We don’t expect this to massively lower rates or unlock tons of inventory,” Zhao said in a note. “The impact is likely to be limited because spending $200 billion on mortgage bonds is actually a relatively small asset purchase program.”

The Federal Reserve’s quantitative easing programs over the last 20 years required enormous asset purchases to bring down long-term interest rates.

From 2020 to 2022, for example, the Fed bought $2 trillion in U.S. Treasury securities and $2.5 trillion in mortgage bonds. These transactions helped keep the 30-year rate below 5 percent.

As part of its three-year-long tightening efforts, the central bank has reduced its exposure to mortgage-backed securities, reaching a five-year low of $2.1 trillion.

While this action would generate short-term benefits, “medium-term risks remain substantial,” according to Dilin Wu, research strategist at Pepperstone.

“Expanding GSE-held MBS leaves more risk on government-backed balance sheets,” Wu said in a Jan. 9 research note, adding that the $200 billion inches closer to “regulatory tolerance limits.”

“If the FHFA [Federal Housing Finance Agency] cannot or will not loosen constraints further, the plan’s effectiveness could be limited,” she said.

Ultimately, the structural challenges persist, mainly that decades of underbuilding have led to supply shortages across the U.S. housing market.

Even if this stimulates demand, it will likely push up prices, countering the administration’s affordability objectives.

Another Tool Available

Since 2020, median home prices have risen more than 20 percent amid a homebuying frenzy at the onset of the pandemic, fueled by ultra-low mortgage rates.

Conditions created a lock-in effect, with homeowners securing 3 percent to 4 percent mortgages and being unable to move.

Over the last several months, the administration has considered an all-of-the-above approach—from portable mortgages to building incentives—to ensure homeownership is attainable for the young generation of families.

Kimberly Hayek contributed to this report.

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Comments 5

  1. Mike says:
    2 months ago

    If a reduction of $100 – $200 per month due to rates falling will motivate you to get off the sidelines and purchase a home then you probably can’t afford it to begin with.

    Reply
    • Bettina Fuller says:
      2 months ago

      Probably true (that you cannot afford it), but most young couples will still make the jump and purchase a home. Rents are astronomical and people long for their own place.

      Reply
  2. Malc says:
    2 months ago

    Govt shouldn’t be goosing the debt market at all. The Govt should be paying 75% interest on their bonds, just like any other deadbeat that owes $40 trillion dollars and only has a $3T “income”. Govt shouldn’t be an ATM machine for welfare and entitlements. The US dollar is a turd covered in sugar.

    Reply
  3. ArizonaCitizen says:
    2 months ago

    …a an individual that has bought homes and sold homes over a span of over 50 years of my life thus far I have never seen such a large influx of ‘new builds’ and very large tracts of homes being currently built since the Biden years in Arizona as I do today…S/E Metro Phoenix area from Chandler to San Tan Valley south to Florence there are subdivisions of 10’s of thousands of homes in progress…the problem is there is very little industry, retail and manufacturing located in this huge area…these homes were developed and intern building financing made in the Biden era…rumors were at the time these homes were a earmarked to be ‘given’ to all the immigrants that Biden allowed to jump the border by the ‘millions’ in order to make the ‘dream’ of ‘instant equity’ for these invaders of our country.
    Now that President Trump is in office and is trying to clean up the mess that Biden created, these homes are still being completed and neighborhoods are being made…but NOT by ‘white people’…’special ‘no down payment’ and ‘no closing costs’ are being offered to ‘special interest type of buyers’…want to know who is actually ‘paying for these homes ?…your guess is as good as mine…perhaps the US Taxpayer might be surprised where their money is being spent…Arizona has in recent years turned ‘Blue’…sad, but true,

    Reply
  4. Cristo says:
    2 months ago

    Sad but true. CO is no different. Woke, DEI, brainwashed Blue in all the populated areas. Sanctuary State Lib/Dem officials and of course do-nothing Rino’s, all corrupt to their core.
    MAGA is a pale rider on the high plains desert around here. My kids graduated collage here few years back, still can’t get adequate career type jobs, let alone affordable home ownership opportunities.

    Reply

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