Good news for those applying for mortgages. Mortgage rates sunk to 6.18% with the benchmark 3-year fixed rate mortgage indicator, ending November 22. The rate had been 6.24% one week earlier and a year ago it stood at 6.8%.
Applications for new home buyers slid 2.8% and applications for all mortgages fell 3.7% for the week of November 17th.
Mortgage rates fall once again as the 30- year fixed-rate mortgage rates move down. Rates have fallen for the 10 of the last 11 weeks according to Freddie Mac.
The 5-year adjustable mortgage stayed at 6%. The 1-year ARM averaged 5.46%, which is a 6-month low.
Notwithstanding, mortgage application index soared to its highest level since January. The activity shot up 17% according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.
Meanwhile, job growth is seen as sluggish even as jobless claims fall for the 4th drop in five weeks. Private employers added 78,000 jobs in September. U.S. factory orders were flat in August and CEO’s are gloomy on future of the economy. The Business Council and Conference Board said that 45.6 % of the CEO’s polled expect the economy to worsen over the next 6 months.
Mortgage rates have remaind stable due to the Federal Reserve not raising interest rates. The pre-owned single family home sales market is soft this seaon. Subprime lending and adjustable rate market find many battling foreclosure because of greed for home ownership and premium interest rates. Consumers with poor credit and financial flaws put themselves and their banks in risk.
Prices are going raising as the cost of living goes up. Property values shrinking, wages and the job market is still decent. The burden of local, state and the federal government are spending money like drunken sailors and it's only the American fighting attitude that keeps the working guy/gal able to continue. We all know that consumer inflation is far higher than the 2.1 percent official CPI inflation rate. Politicians are “cooking” the books. Eventually the markets will self-correct, but will we ever get spend-thrift politicians?
Further housing weakness will be triggered by a credit crunch was predicted by UCLA Anderson Forecast in a recent Investment Business Daily article.
UCLA Anderson Forecast predicted growth to rise and a fed funds rate to 4.5% from 5.25% and they see at least two, if not three, Fed rate cuts keeping economic growth this year in positive territory. Lower mortgage rates are on the horizon.
With a 8 1/2 month backlog of housing inventory, a drop in mortgage interest rates would rev up a few engines. The National Association of Realtors said that pending home sales rose 0.7%, a gain that came despite bad weather and the impact from subprime mortgage problems.
Mortgage applications rose 3.2% in the week ending February 23 and were up 8.8% vs. the same week last year according to Mortgage Bankers Association. The average rate for 30-year fixed rate loans fell to a 7-week low of 6.16%.
Mortgage applications rose 8.1% and refinancing applications surged. The 30-year fixed rate mortgage fell 15 basis points to 5.98% last week which was the lowest since October 2005.
Home builder stocks rose on the data which was further fueled by a Toll Bros., the luxury home builder. Report that they anticipate a market bottom. Additionally, Citigrop upgraded the home builder stock sector.