Lower
interest rates following the Federal Reserve's announcement fueled a surge in mortgage applications late
last week. According to the Mortgage
Bankers Association (MBA), its Market Composite Index which measures the volume
of those applications increased 9.3 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis
during the week ended September 23. On a
non-adjusted basis volume was up 9.2 percent.
The
Refinance Index rose 11.2 percent while the seasonally adjusted Purchase Index
was up 2.6 percent. The unadjusted
Purchase Index increased 2.2 percent from the week ended September 16 and was
0.1 percent higher than during the same period in 2010.
Purchase Index vs 30 Yr Fixed
Refinance Index vs 30 Yr Fixed
Four
week moving averages rose for the seasonally adjusted Market Index which was up
1.96 percent and the Purchase Index, up 2.60 percent; the seasonally adjusted
Purchase Index decreased 0.18 percent.
"Mortgage
rates declined last week, at least partially in response to the Fed's
announcement that they would shift their portfolio towards longer-term Treasury
securities, and that they would resume buying mortgage-backed securities,"
said Mike Fratantoni, MBA's Vice President of Research and Economics.
"With lower rates, refinance application volume increased to its highest
level since August 19, 2011. Purchase application volume also increased.
However, the increase was in conventional purchase applications, which were up
by 4.9 percent. Purchase applications for government loans fell by 0.6 percent
over the week, likely influenced by the pending decline in FHA loan
limits."
Refinancing as a
share of all mortgage activity rose to 79.7 percent, an increase of 14 basis
points from the previous week and the highest share of activity since the
survey recalibrated its benchmarks in January.
Adjustable rate mortgage (ARM) activity fell 6.7 percent.
Figures for of
August show that the average size of a loan used to purchase a home during the
month was $212,700, up from $211,200 in July.
Loans for refinancing averaged $241,300, up from $209,200 the previous
month. The largest loans were made in
the Pacific region where the size of the average purchase mortgage was $304,800
and the average loan for refinancing was $344,500.
Rates for a
conforming 30 year fixed-rate mortgage (FRM) decreased by 4 basis points to
4.25 percent during the week and points, including the origination fee, were
down from 0.41 to 0.35 point. The
average contract interest rate for a jumbo 30-year FRM (a loan with an amount
exceeding $417,500) decreased from 4.55 percent with 0.46 point to 4.51 percent
with 0.38 point. FHA backed 30-year
loans decreased to 4.05 percent with 0.39 point from 4.07 percent with 0.51
point. The effective rate for all three 30-year
products also decreased.
The rate for
conforming 15-year fixed-rate mortgages rose a single basis point to 3.47 percent
with points unchanged at 0.45. The
effective rate also increased from the previous week. The rate for a 5/1 ARM decreased from 2.96
percent with 0.49 point to 2.95 percent with 0.48 point and the effective rate
declined as well. Interest rates quoted
are, in all cases for loans with an 80 percent loan to value ratio.
MBA's application
survey is conducted among mortgage bankers, commercial banks and thrifts and covers
over 75 percent of all U.S. retail residential mortgage applications.