What Rising Mortgage Rates Mean for Banks

Updated

If you've been thinking about refinancing your mortgage, then you might want to get on top of that sooner rather than later. According to Freddie Mac, the average rate on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage increased this week to 3.91%. That's nearly 60 basis points higher than the trough at the end of 2012.

Besides the immediate implications to your monthly payments, however, a more nuanced question is: What does this mean for the banks? I'm talking specifically about Wells Fargo , JPMorgan Chase , Bank of America , and U.S. Bancorp , which collectively account for a majority of home loans in the United States.


It's tempting to conclude that this is bad news. Take Wells Fargo as an example: in the first quarter of this year, it originated a staggering $109 billion in home loans -- by comparison, the other three banks combined underwrote $99 billion dollars' worth. If one were to believe the laws of supply and demand, it seems all but certain that these astronomical numbers will come down as the price of mortgages (expressed via its interest rate) goes up. Wells Fargo's CFO Timothy Sloan alluded to this on a recent conference call saying that, "it's probably likely that revenues and margins [in the mortgage business] will come down a little bit."

It'd nevertheless be a mistake to conclude that the mortgage bonanza, if you will, is coming to an end. If you dig further into Wells Fargo's numbers -- and they're generally representative of industrywide trends -- you find that a full two-thirds of its mortgage applications related to refinancing as opposed to purchase-money mortgages. As interest rates go up, these will invariably come down. And when they do, actual homebuyers will step in to fill at least some of the void.

Beyond this, it's worth noting that higher long-term interest rates, while potentially weighing on loan origination volumes, also exert a positive influence on bank profits. This is because they fuel the yield on earning assets and, through this, the net interest margin and, finally, the bottom line.

The point is, while rising mortgage rates may be bad news for homeowners, it's far from certain whether they're equally bad for banks.

Wells Fargo's dedication to solid, conservative banking helped it vastly outperform its peers during the financial meltdown. Today, Wells is the same great bank as ever, but with its stock trading at a premium to the rest of the industry, is there still room to buy, or is it time to cash in your gains? To help figure out whether Wells Fargo is a buy today, I invite you to download our premium research report from one of The Motley Fool's top banking analysts. Click here now for instant access to this in-depth take on Wells Fargo.

The article What Rising Mortgage Rates Mean for Banks originally appeared on Fool.com.

John Maxfield owns shares of Bank of America. The Motley Fool recommends Wells Fargo. The Motley Fool owns shares of Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, and Wells Fargo. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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