Today was a quiet for Mortgage Rates.  Although several lenders released improved rate sheets later in the day, the overall landscape of rate sheet offerings from lender to lender is strikingly similar to that seen on Friday.  This leaves the 4.0% Best-Execution rate intact and even the closing costs associated with whatever rate you were quotes on Friday may not have changed that much today.  We said Friday looked like a good day to lock in the context of recent rate offerings so today's essentially unchanged rates would mean the same applies today.

Today's BEST-EXECUTION Rates

  • 30YR FIXED -   4.0%, Some 4.125%, Very few 3.875%'s
  • FHA/VA - 3.75%, more balanced with 3.875% today
  • 15 YEAR FIXED -  3.375%-3.5%
  • 5 YEAR ARMS -  low 3% range, huge variations from lender to lender.

Guidance: (much of this is a repeat from Friday's guidance, but it bears repeating as the same 1.95% level in Treasuries held firm again today).  The reason we increasingly favor locking at these rates has nothing to do with what we think the market is going to do and everything to do with managing risk based on current information and past precedent.  "Risks of floating" ≠ "possible returns" when the Best-Execution rate is less only a quarter point away from it's all time low.   

Not only that, but even markets may be giving us clues that rates would have a hard time improving much right now anyway!  As we've discussed in the past, although Mortgage-Backed-Securities are the most accurate and direct drivers of mortgage rates, longer-dated US Treasuries do also tend to move in the same direction.  Considering the recent trading range in 10yr yields lies between 1.95 and 2.14 and that 10yr yields bounced off 1.95 yesterday and confirmed the move higher today, the broader bond market may have a tough time making any more gains next week if this technical resistance in 10yr yields is telling us the truth.  But in general, we wouldn't advocate trying to get that far ahead of the markets.  Just knowing that today's rates are "about as low as they've ever been," is good enough reason to consider pulling the trigger. 

Ongoing Batting Cage Metaphor: (this can be applied to any endeavor where you're trying to "go out on a high note").   Rate offerings from lenders over the past month have been like a temperamental pitching machine in a batting cage-generally getting the ball across the plate, but with no really juicy pitches.  But recently, we've seen some more consistently good pitches (best-ex around 4.0% instead of 4.25%).  Sure... you've seen better, but not by much (3.875% and RARELY 3.75%).  How many more will you count on before calling it a day?  Personally, I'd like to end my batting cage session with a nice hit.  The more "pitches" you wait for with rates already at a 4.0%, the greater the risk that the next pitch will be a curve-ball.  To drop the metaphor, although rates this low CAN go slightly lower, the improvements are fairly minimal compared to how much higher they could go.  Still, if you're not in any particular need to refinance and are operating on a longer-term perspective, we continue to feel good about that "wall" at a 4.25% best-execution level as a good stop-loss point for inclined floaters.  Ask us to explain more about that if it doesn't make sense. 

Another way of looking at the lock/float spectrum based on the lowest MBS coupon actively trading and being produced in the secondary mortgage market: