Mortgage News Home

Wednesday July 23, 2008

Home Page   26,235 Active Members   Register Welcome, Guest    Sign In  

Home

Latest Headlines

Popular Stories

Bookmark Us

Reader Comments

SUBSCRIBE

SEARCH OUR SITE

RSS News

Mortgage Rates
  30 Yr Fix 6.26% -0.11%
  15 Yr Fix 5.78% -0.13%
  1 Yr ARM 5.10% -0.07%
  5/1 ARM 5.80% -0.02%
  30 Yr Tres 4.66% 0.02%
  Fed Prime 5.00% -0.25%
MND Features

- Wiki
- Video News
- Mortgage License Information
- Real Estate License Information
- Mortgage Content Syndication
- Mortgage Fraud
- Housing Bubble
News Archives

Submit A News Tip
or Story Idea
 

Free Subscription To News Alerts
Stay up to date on breaking news with our free News Alert Service.


Growth Worries Push Mortgage Rates Down

4481 Views - Printer Friendly - Email This Story To A Friend
 
RSS COMMENTS(0) LINK HERE ADD NEWS TO YOUR WEBSITE

Mortgage rates showed substantial declines for the previous week according to Freddie Mac's Primary Mortgage Market Survey. Similar drops were recorded by the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) in its Mortgage Applications Survey for the week ended October 26.

Freddie Mac reported that the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage (FRM) averaged 6.33 with 0.5 point which was six basis points lower than both the previous week and the average rate for the same time period in 2006.

The 15-year FRM averaged 5.99 percent with 0.6 point compared to the previous week when it averaged 6.08 percent also with 0.6 point. One year ago the average rate was 6.10 percent.


Five-year Treasury-indexed hybrid adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs) had an average contract interest rate of 6.03 percent with 0.5 point. One week ago the rate was 6.11 percent also with 0.5 point and one year ago it was 6.14 percent.

The one-year Treasury-indexed ARM was down 10 basis points to 5.66 percent with 0.6 point. In October 2006 the average rate was 5.60 percent.

Frank Nothaft, Freddie Mac vice president and chief economist commented on the survey; "Market concerns about slower economic growth over the next few months allowed mortgage rates to drift lower from last week. How much of a drag the housing slump will be on the economy remains unknown. Additionally, recent reports suggest some regional manufacturing weakness in October.

"Meanwhile, sales of existing single-family homes in September dropped to the slowest pace in nearly a decade - since January 1998 - reflecting the effects of the credit tightening that occurred in August."

The MBA survey showed similar rate decreases. The 30-year FRM decreased to 6.15 percent from 6.21 percent with points, including the origination fee, dropping to 1.05 from 1.13.

The average contract interest rate for 15-year FRMs declined seven basis points to 5.79 although points increased slightly from 1.06 to 1.10.

The one-year ARM averaged 5.93 percent with 0.93 point compared with an average of 6.10 percent with 0.92 point the week before.

The volume of mortgage applications increased 3.8 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis and 3.6 on an unadjusted basis. Volume was 19.5 percent higher than the same week in 2006.

The percentage of overall mortgage applications intended for refinancing increased to 49.6 percent last week from 47.0 the week before and the market share of adjustable rate mortgages increased from 14.2 percent to 14.7 percent.



Story Views: 4481 | Permalink

Story Tools



Email This Story To A Friend

Subscribe To News Alerts
 

Related Tags

Select a Tag for more information related to that Tag. (View All Tags)
 
mortgage rates freddie mac mba mortgage bankers association mortgage applications frank nothaft

 

Comments (0)

Post Comment


No Comments At This Time

Post A Comment

Please fill out the form below to submit a comment.

Name: 
(Required - Type Anonymous or Use First Name Only if Private)
Email Address: 
(Not Required So No Fake Emails Please.)
URL or Weblog:
(Leave Blank If You Don't Have One - Use http://)
Comments: 
(Please keep comments on topic. No HTML Allowed. No Advertisng.)
Please Note: Due to Comment Spam, all comments are reviewed by hand. Most comments will appear shortly after submission but it may take up to 12 hours to appear. If you would like to come back, click here to Bookmark the page.
PLEASE DO NOT USE ALL CAPS


Character Count =     (5000 Character Limit)

If you would like to leave a longer comment, please submit your comments in 5000 character increments and we will merge your comments.
Notify me via email when my comment is approved.


Note: Please don't bother spamming. All submissions are reviewed by our our editorial staff. Comment spam and irrelevant links will not be approved.

 




NEW VIDEO
(3 New Today)
NEW! Real Estate Power Woman
NEW! Downtown Real Estate


Reader Comments (More)
After reading this article it appears that the infrastructure et al was unconcious and incompetent because it chose to be unaware ...
Read
Bravo..about time. I would like to see regulation on after the fact loans that are modified after documents have been signed. It i...
Read
This makes me want to invest in the failing lenders and wait for the profits to role in. The FEDS will never allow them to fail an...
Read
Home - Contact - Sitemap - Disclaimer - Privacy Statement - Advertising
All Content Copyright © 2003 - 2008 Brown House Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form without the express written permission of MortgageNewsDaily.com is prohibited.