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Vol. I · No. 195 · 2541 Reports Wednesday, July 15, 2026
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Warsh testifies on Fed monetary policy effects on housing affordability

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Topics in This Edition

EconomyMarketsmonetary policy

Summary

The segment shows a congressional hearing exchange where a lawmaker questions Fed Chair Kevin Warsh on monetary policy's impact on mortgage rates, first-time homebuyers, minority borrowers, and foreclosure risks amid post-pandemic rate increases. Warsh acknowledges housing's role in household budgets, notes cautious outlook on the sector versus manufacturing, and advocates stable policy avoiding boom-bust cycles. The clip references a '21st century housing bill' and draws from Warsh's opening remarks. Sourcing relies on the live testimony itself with no additional experts or data graphics shown in the provided excerpt.

Editorial Assessment

The broadcast presents a straightforward, accurate excerpt of recent testimony that aligns with Warsh's public statements on sector-neutral policy and housing sensitivity to rates. Mortgage rates have indeed more than doubled from pandemic lows of around 2.65% to mid-6% levels in 2026, supporting the core affordability concerns raised. Viewers may miss broader context on the scale of pandemic forbearance exits (largely resolved earlier) and details of the referenced housing legislation. Framing remains balanced without partisan emphasis, though the clip emphasizes vulnerabilities for first-time and minority buyers without counter-statistics on overall market conditions or supply constraints.

Key Moments

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Mortgage rates have more than doubled since pandemic lows

Pandemic low of 2.65% in Jan 2021; current averages ~6.5% in 2026 per Freddie Mac and Bankrate data

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Fed decisions significantly affect housing but do not target the sector

Warsh's testimony and contemporaneous reporting confirm this position explicitly

missing context

High rates risk pushing exiting forbearance borrowers into foreclosures

Pandemic forbearances largely ended by 2023-2024; ongoing risks tied more to general affordability than widespread new exits

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Policy should avoid boom-bust making one generation's homebuying more fortunate than the next

Direct quote from Warsh's testimony in multiple reports

Sources Consulted

  1. WATCH LIVE: Fed chair Kevin Warsh testifies on monetary policy in House hearing
  2. In high-stakes testimony, Warsh pledges transparency amid Fed operational overhaul
  3. Mortgage Rate History: 1970s To 2026
  4. Data Spotlight: The Impact of Changing Mortgage Interest Rates