Powell Signals a Pivot: What Friday’s Jackson Hole Speech Means for Rates and Mortgages

Powell Signals a Pivot: What Friday’s Jackson Hole Speech Means for Rates and Mortgages

At Jackson Hole on August 22, 2025, Fed Chair Jerome Powell outlined a refreshed policy framework and signaled that rate cuts are on the table—if incoming data keep tilting the risks toward slower growth and a cooler job market. For borrowers, the message is constructive but measured: relief is plausible, not promised. 

Key Points from the Speech

  1. Framework refresh. The Fed formally moved away from its 2020 “average inflation” approach, returning to flexible inflation targeting suited to a world where near-zero rates are less likely.
  2. Cut bias (with caution). Powell said the evolving balance of risks may warrant adjusting policy, but the Committee will proceed carefully. Translation: they’re open to cutting, not committed. 
  3. Tariffs & inflation. He flagged tariff-related price pressure as something to monitor, but not necessarily a reason to delay easing if the trend in underlying inflation stays benign.
  4. Where rates stand now. The fed-funds target is 4.25%–4.50% after holding steady in July. 

What this means for borrowing costs

  • Mortgages follow bonds, not the fed funds rate directly. But if the Fed credibly telegraphs easing, the 10-year Treasury and mortgage-backed securities typically rally—putting downward pressure on 30-year mortgage rates. As of Aug 21, the average 30-year fixed rate sat at 6.58%. 
  • September watch. Many analysts now see a live chance of a Sept. 17 cut; even a small step could nudge mortgage rates lower if inflation data cooperate. 

Practical takeaways

  • Buyers: A modest rate dip improves affordability and monthly payments; lock with a float-down option if available.
  • Owners: A 0.50% drop from 6.58% to ~6.08% on a $500,000 loan cuts the payment by roughly $160/month (illustrative).
  • Everyone: Watch upcoming PCE inflation and jobs data—those prints will likely decide how fast and how far the Fed moves.