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Mortgage Rates
30 Yr FRM 4.96% 0.01%
15 Yr FRM 4.33% 0.01%
1 Yr ARM 4.12% -0.10%
5/1 Yr ARM 4.09% 0.04%
30 YR Tres 4.58% -0.01%
Fed Prime 3.25% 0.00%

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Recent Polls

Will the Federal Reserve Exit from the Agency MBS Market as Planned?

Created By: Adam Quinones
  • Yes (60.7%)
  • No. They Will Extend Again (39.3%)
  • Mortgage Rates on a Roller Coaster Ride

    Like yesterday, early morning weakness in the MBS market led to slightly worse rate sheets at the beginning of the day. However as the day progressed, MBS prices rallied enough to allow many lenders to reprice for the better. This brought us back to where we ended the day yesterday. The par 30 year conventional rate mortgage remains in the 4.75% to 5.00% range for well qualified consumers. I still say you should be locking ahead of the employment report coming Friday. If the numbers are better than expected or even not as bad as expected, rates will likely move higher. FAST. If the report comes in as expected or worse, I do not feel lenders will be passing along much lower mortgage rates. Nothing to gain, much to lose in my opinion. Still locking. ...
  • Mortgage Rates Hold Near 2010 Lows. Reviewing the Week Ahead

    The week ahead is busy with the highest impacting report scheduled to be released on Friday morning. Reports from fellow mortgage professionals indicate rate sheets to be slightly worse than the repriced rate sheets of Friday afternoon. The par 30 year conventional rate mortgage continues to hold in the 4.75% to 5.00% range for well qualified consumers. To secure a par interest rate you must have a FICO credit score of 740 or higher, a loan to value at 80% or less and pay all closing costs including an estimated one point loan origination/discount/broker fee. You may elect to pay less in closing costs, but you will have to accept a higher interest rate. ...
  • Mortgage Demand Picks Up Ahead of Expected Rise in Rates

    Michael Fratantoni, MBA's VP of Research and Economics, warned to expect rising mortgage rates over the next few months as the Fed exits the MBS buying program. This is line with recent guidance issued on Mortgage News Daily. Don’t wait for mortgage rates to decline! I stand by my statement that 4.75% could very well be the lowest mortgage rates offered in 2010...unless there is a fundamental shift in economic outlook. If you have been waiting to refinance or to buy, get out there and start the process before you miss the boat of sub 5% rates. ...
  • Rate Sheet Rebate Reduced After Jobs Data Preview

    Mortgage rates made modest improvements yesterday thanks to a rally in benchmark Treasuries and mortgage backed securities. The extension of the Monday afternoon rates rally yesterday allowed most lenders to reprice for the better which pushed mortgage borrowing costs lower. Early on today it appeared that mortgage rates would continue to benefit from more rallying in the rates market, but that didn't last long. Since starting the session with gains, MBS prices have fallen rapidly which led to a few lenders repricing for the worse. Two steps forward, two steps back!...
  • Mortgage Rates Holding Near Recent Highs to Start the Year

    Reports from fellow mortgage professionals indicate the par 30 year conventional rate mortgage remains in the 5.00 to 5.25% range for well qualified consumers. Rate sheet rebate is mostly unchanged while a few lenders are marginally worse. To secure a par interest rate you must have a FICO credit score of 740 or higher, a loan to value at 80% or less and pay all closing costs including an estimated one point loan origination/discount/broker fee. If you are looking to secure a 15 year fixed rate, you should expect a par rate in the 4.50% to 4.75% range with similar costs. ...
  • Mortgage Rates Tick Higher Ahead of Jobs Data. 4.50% Floor is Firm

    Tomorrow we get the most important economic report, the Employment Situation. If this data indicates fewer job losses than expected, mortgage rates could rise very quickly. If worse than expected we could see an improvement to rates; however, I am going to continue to advise locking because lenders have proven themselves reluctant to pass along lower mortgage rates once 4.50% is reached, which we saw earlier this week. If you can lock today at 4.625%, why risk floating if lenders won’t offer rates below 4.50%? Not much to gain but there is a potential for a quick and large move higher with rates, so much to lose. ...
  • Rate Sheet Rebate Worse, Mortgage Rates Still Holding Near Record Lows

    Reports from fellow mortgage professionals indicate the par 30 year conventional rate mortgage remains in the 4.50% to 4.75% range for well qualified consumers. There are, HOWEVER, several lenders rewarding high FICO, low LTC borrowers with 4.375% rates. To secure a par interest rate you must have a FICO credit score of 740 or higher, a loan to value at 80% or less and pay all closing costs associated with the loan including an estimated one point loan origination/discount/broker fee. If you are seeking a 15 year term, you should expect a par rate between 4.00% to 4.25% with similar costs. While AQ and MG do believe that benchmark rates have room to fall further, we all agree that mortgage rates are not likely to continue to decline. That said, I continue to recommend locking over floating. At this point we are seeing about the best rates in history and lenders continue to be reluctant to offer lower rates. ...
  • Mortgage Rates Pressured Higher Ahead of FOMC Statement. Did You Lock?

    Mortgage rates ticked higher yesterday as prices of mortgage backed securities were pressured lower by a selloff in the long end of the Treasury yield curve. To remind readers, as prices of MBS and Treasuries fall, their yields or rate increase…price and yield have an inverse relationship. No major report or headline caused the moved lower, AQ and MG point out that it was a function of Friday's bond market rally being unwound before today's Treasury auction announcement and the FOMC meeting which was ignited by a "Build America Bond" issuance pricing in California. Their brains are complicated but we make a good team! Whatever the reason was, price losses held into the close and the majority of lenders repriced for the worse. Reports from fellow mortgage professionals indicate that mortgage rates have moved higher this morning. The par 30 year conventional rate mortgage is now in the 4.875% to 5.125% range for well qualified consumers. To secure a par rate you must have a FICO credit score of 740 or higher, a loan to value at 80% or less and pay all closing costs including one point loan origination/discount/broker fee. You can elect to pay less upfront fees but your interest rate will be higher....
  • Mortgage Rates in Aggressive Side of Range

    Last week ended on positive note for mortgage backed securities and mortgage rates. As stock indexes fell, market participants re-allocated portfolios from risky assets to safer investments, resulting in added demand for government AAA rated fixed income securities. The benchmark 10 yr Treasury note moved back under 3.40% and MBS closed near their best levels in the past few weeks. Most lenders repriced for the better. Following the release of today’s data, MBS have moved off their recent price highs but continue to hold near the high side of current trading range which I have used to recommend locking or floating. Considering MBS prices are still close to recent highs it makes more sense to lock rather than float, so I would advise anyone closing within the next week to go ahead and lock to remove all chances of a spike higher in mortgage rates....
  • What Will Move Mortgage Rates This Week

    Last week was a very nice week for mortgage rates. The economic data was rather mixed, some pointing toward economic growth, while others hinting at a double dip recession. Despite this mixed data, the prices of mortgage backed securities approached the highest levels of the year bringing mortgage rates to 5 month lows. After hitting the highs of the year early on Friday, MBS did come under some selling pressure which lead to many leaders repricing for the worse Friday afternoon as the losses held til close. There is a possibility that we are beginning to see a shift in economic outlook away from the quick V shaped recovery toward a more painful W(double dip) shaped recovery. If this holds true, it could cause stocks to move lower which would benefit MBS and treasuries. ...
  • Mortgage Rates Dip as New Quarter Begins

    As the third quarter ended yesterday, mortgage rates were unchanged as prices of mortgage backed securities held to the recent range. Since MBS rallied on Monday which pushed them to levels not seen for quite some time, they have moved sideways since as market participants await the key Employment Situation report due out on Friday. However, today we do have several economic reports coming out which can have an effect on the flow of investor money. ...