While a 50-year mortgage could significantly lower monthly payments to aid affordability, it has a major drawback. The total interest paid over the life of the loan would likely be double that of a traditional 30-year mortgage. This prohibitive cost, along with technical challenges, would likely suppress borrower demand for such a product.

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While falling mortgage rates will improve affordability, the "lock-in effect" for existing homeowners with ultra-low rates will persist. This will suppress the typical sales volume rebound, leading to an anemic 3% growth in purchase volumes, a historically tepid response to improved affordability conditions.

Proposals to allow homeowners to take their low-rate mortgages with them (portability) or transfer them to a buyer (assumability) cannot be retroactively applied due to contract law. Creating new mortgages with these features is possible, but the added benefits to the borrower would likely result in a higher, not lower, interest rate.

The proposal of a 50-year mortgage is not a solution but a symptom of a deeply unhealthy economy. It's like giving insulin to a diabetic: it manages the immediate problem (unaffordable payments) without addressing the root cause (a severe lack of housing supply and inflationary pressures).

Common wisdom to rapidly pay off a mortgage is suboptimal. Due to compounding, investing extra cash—even if the return rate merely matches your mortgage interest—will generate significantly more wealth over time. One investment compounds up while the other debt amortizes down, creating a large wealth gap.

A proposed 50-year mortgage, intended to improve housing affordability, is a flawed solution. The extended term means borrowers build equity at a negligible rate, making the financial outcome similar to renting and failing to deliver the key wealth-building benefit of homeownership. It's a demand-side fix for a supply-side problem.

Even with multiple expected Fed rate cuts, mortgage rates may not fall significantly. They are not directly tied to the Fed funds rate, and other factors are needed to bring them down enough to improve housing affordability.

A major driver of today's housing scarcity is that homeowners, particularly Boomers, who refinanced into sub-3% mortgages have no financial incentive to ever sell. This seemingly positive economic condition has had the negative side effect of locking vast amounts of housing inventory in place, worsening the supply crisis.

A significant cause of today's housing inventory shortage is that homeowners are locked into low-interest mortgages. "Portable mortgages," which are being actively evaluated by the FHFA, would allow homeowners to transfer their existing mortgage to a new property, removing the financial disincentive to move and potentially unlocking market liquidity.

The American housing market is increasingly inaccessible to younger generations. The median age of a homebuyer has hit a record high of 59, the same age one can access retirement funds. Even the median first-time buyer is now 40, indicating a systemic affordability crisis.

Extending mortgage terms doesn't solve housing affordability because it primarily boosts demand for a fixed supply of homes. This drives asset prices higher, as sellers adjust prices to match buyers' new monthly payment capacity. The historical example of Japan's housing bubble, fueled by 100-year mortgages, illustrates this danger.