Mortgage News Home

Sunday October 12, 2008

Home Page   28,684 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 5.94% -0.16%
  15 Yr Fix 5.63% -0.15%
  1 Yr ARM 5.15% 0.03%
  5/1 ARM 5.90% -0.10%
  30 Yr Tres 4.06% 0.03%
  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.


Long Term Mortgage Rates Continue To Fall

9411 Views - Printer Friendly - Email This Story To A Friend
 
RSS COMMENTS(0) LINK HERE ADD NEWS TO YOUR WEBSITE

Long term mortgage interest rates showed a healthy decline during the previous week according to the Primary Mortgage Market Survey released by Freddie Mac. The one-year ARM, however, shot up in this report as it had one week earlier in the Mortgage Bankers Association survey.

The 30-year fixed rate mortgage (FRM) averaged 6.45 percent with 0.5 point during the week compared to an average of 6.52 percent with 0.4 point the previous week. This is the lowest rate for the 30-year since May 31 when the average was 6.42 percent. One year ago this product had an average rate of 6.44 percent.


The 15-year FRM averaged 6.12 percent and 0.5 point, a slight dip from last weeks 6.18 percent also with 0.5 point. One year ago the 15-year was at 6.14 percent.

Five-year Treasury-indexed hybrid adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs) increased to 6.35 percent with 0.6 point, up slightly from its average of 6.34 percent and 0.6 point one week earlier. This same week in 2006 this product averaged 6.11 percent.

Last week the one-year ARM skyrocketed 67 basis points in the MBA survey and this week Freddie Mac reported that the one-year was up 24 basis points to 5.84 percent. Fees and points were also up from 0.6 to 0.8. Last year the one-year ARM averaged 5.59 percent.

"Interest rates on conforming long-term fixed-rate mortgages declined slightly, while rates on one-year adjustable rate mortgages increased by about a quarter of a percent," said Frank Nothaft, Freddie Mac vice president and chief economist. "The increase in ARM rates is consistent with movement of the yields on short-term Treasury securities, which have exhibited higher volatility recently due to market uncertainties.

"In other news, new home sales defied consensus expectations and rose in July to 870 thousand units, led by a 22 percent increase in the Western region. Existing home sales fell, however, though by less than the market had forecasted, to 5.75 million units, with the decline limited to the Midwest region."

The MBA's Weekly Mortgage Applications Survey for the week ended August 31 reported that the average contract interest rate for the 30-year FRM increase a single basis point to 6.42 percent with points, including the origination fee, dropping from 1.48 to 1.09.

The 15-year FRM was unchanged at 6.10 percent with points down slightly to 1.16 from 1.19.

The one-year ARM increased again this week but only by one basis point this time to 6.52 percent with fees and points decreasing to 0.93 from 1.0.

Mortgage applications activity was up 1.3 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis from one week earlier but was down 0.2 percent unadjusted. Activity was up 10 percent from the same week in 2006.

The refinance share of mortgage activity increased to 41.4 percent of total applications from 40.4 percent the previous week. The adjustable-rate mortgage share of activity decreased to 12.6 from 15.0 percent of total applications from the previous week. This is probably the lowest market share for the one-year adjustable rate mortgage in the two plus years we have been keeping track.



Story Views: 9411 | Permalink

Story Tools



Email This Story To A Friend

Subscribe To News Alerts
 

 

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
Bush on Credit Crisis
Credit Crunch Hits Chicago Cubs


Reader Comments (More)
It’s time for homeowners to stop cashing out their equity and start paying off their mortgages. BTW, Great Article!
Read
I recall overhearing the conversation in 2005 of a young 30 something in a bar talking to a mortgage broker about his home purchas...
Read
I guess we are all screwed just to be very conservative. When are the federal Government and local governments and even businesses...
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.