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Search resuls for: "Mortgage News Daily"


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Mortgage rates fell last week for the fourth time in five weeks, and homebuyers appear to be responding. That left total mortgage application volume essentially flat last week, up just 0.3% from the previous week, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association's seasonally adjusted index. Mortgage applications to purchase a home rose 5% for the week but were still 19% lower than the same week one year ago. Mortgage rates are now 88 basis points higher than they were a year ago, but most current homeowners refinanced when rates were at record lows two years ago. "With rates already at two-month lows last week, the result is gentle descent to slightly lower two-month lows."
Persons: Joel Kan, Matthew Graham, Graham Organizations: Mortgage, Mortgage News, CNBC PRO Locations: refinance
Total application volume increased 3% last week from the previous week, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association's seasonally adjusted index. Most mortgage rates in our survey decreased, with the 30-year fixed mortgage rate decreasing to the lowest rate in two months," said Joel Kan, MBA's deputy chief economist. Applications to refinance a home loan increased 2% for the week and were just 4% lower than the same week one year ago. Applications for a mortgage to purchase a home increased 4% week to week but were still 20% lower than one year ago. Mortgage rates moved slightly lower this week, but analysts are not expecting any major moves in the near future.
Persons: Joel Kan, Kan, Matthew Graham Organizations: U.S . Mortgage, Mortgage, National Association of Realtors, Mortgage News Locations: Columbus , Ohio, U.S
Welcome to the (almost) red-hot bond market
  + stars: | 2023-11-15 | by ( Nicole Goodkind | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +7 min
When Treasury yields go up, so do mortgage rates; when they go down, mortgage rates tend to follow. Surging mortgage rates over the past few years have sent home loan applications and home sales down sharply. The 30-year fixed rate mortgage was also advancing towards 8% — a level not seen since the dot-com bubble popped in 2000. Those raging Treasury yields brought pain to investors and also increased how much American companies had to pay to service their debts. In fact, Wall Street is struggling to figure out what it means for the timing and scale of future rate cuts.
Persons: , Michael Hartnett, Gina Bolvin, “ We’re, Phillip Wool, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Ellen Zentner Organizations: New, New York CNN, New York Federal, Treasury, Dow, Bank of America, Bolvin Wealth Management, Mortgage News, Mortgage, Association, Financial, Consumer, Federal Reserve, Goldman, Fed, UBS, Airlines for America, AAA Locations: New York
The drop was due to a sharp bond market rally, after the government's monthly inflation report came in lower than analysts had predicted. As bond yields fell, so too did mortgage rates, which loosely follow the yield on the 10-year Treasury . Mortgage rates had already been declining from their recent highs. The 30-year fixed mortgage rate jumped over 8% on Oct. 19, the highest level in more than two decades. "The interest rate rises should be over, and the Fed will have to consider cutting interest rates seriously.
Persons: Matthew Graham, Lawrence Yun Organizations: Mortgage News, Treasury, National Association of Realtors, CNBC PRO Locations: Chatsworth, Los Angeles , California
The cost of buying a home versus renting is at its most extreme level in decades, the Wall Street Journal reported. The average new monthly mortgage payment is 52% higher than the average apartment rent, CBRE data shows. AdvertisementAdvertisementThe premium for buying a home versus renting has it hit extreme levels, as soaring mortgage rates have exacerbated a historically unaffordable housing market. Then after 2008's housing bubble burst, buying a home was about 12% cheaper than renting one in the 2010s, as mortgage rates were low. And home prices have remained elevated even as mortgage rates have climbed, which doesn't usually happen.
Persons: Organizations: Wall Street Journal, Service, Mortgage, Treasury
watch nowToday's housing market is a toxic mix of high mortgage rates, high prices, tight supply and strangely strong pent-up demand — and it's scaring off buyers and sellers alike. Now the popular 30-year fixed mortgage rate is at 8%, the highest in decades, making things even tougher. The result was record-low mortgage rates for two solid years. That, ironically, made the housing market even more expensive. They have little desire to trade the 3% rate they currently have for an 8% mortgage rate on a new purchase.
Persons: Matthew Graham, MND's Graham, He's, Lisa Resch, What's, Lawrence Yun, Yun Organizations: Mortgage News, Federal Reserve, National Association of Realtors, Compass, Washington , D.C, NAR, Buyers Locations: Washington ,, Florida, Tampa, Jacksonville, Orlando, Houston , Texas, Memphis , Tennessee, homebuilders, Horton
This is the slowest sales pace since October 2010, during the Great Recession, when the market was in the midst of a foreclosure crisis. As a comparison, just two years ago, when mortgage rates hovered around 3%, home sales were running at a 6.6 million pace. Adding to higher mortgage rates, the median price of a home sold in September was $394,300, up 2.8% year over year. That's because there is more supply at the higher price points and because higher-end buyers can often use cash. Mortgage demand is now at the lowest level since 1995, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.
Persons: Lawrence Yun, Danielle Hale Organizations: National Association of Realtors, Mortgage News, Federal, Mortgage, Association
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailTight housing supply means crash is unlikely, says Mortgage News Daily's Matthew GrahamMatthew Graham, chief operating officer at Mortgage News Daily, joins 'The Exchange' to discuss a mix of hawkish and dovish commentary coming from the Fed, tightness in home supply stalling a housing value crash, and the risk homebuilder mortgage rate writedowns could have on the overall housing market.
Persons: Matthew Graham Matthew Graham Organizations: Mortgage News
Consumers are about to feel the impact of soaring bond yields, Blackstone president Johnathan Gray told the FT. Higher bond yields are raising borrowing costs all over the economy, from mortgages to personal loans. AdvertisementAdvertisementAmerican consumers are about to feel the sting of soaring bond yields, Blackstone president Johnathan Gray said. Bond yields, which impact borrowing costs for all kinds of loan products, moved higher this week as investors fretted over higher-for-longer interest rates. In some corners of the economy, rising yields and higher borrowing costs have already been acutely felt.
Persons: Blackstone, Johnathan Gray, , Bond, Gray, Morgan Stanley Organizations: Treasury, Service, Financial Times, Mortgage, Federal, Federal Reserve, Consumers, San Francisco Fed
Rates on the 30-year fixed mortgage hit 8% on Wednesday, per Mortgage News Daily. It's the first time the interest rate on the most popular US home loan hit that mark since mid-2000. AdvertisementAdvertisementFor the first time since 2000, the rate on the typical 30-year fixed mortgage hit 8% on Wednesday, according to Mortgage News Daily. Mortgage rates are a critical input for the affordability equation for prospective home buyers, and in previous eras of rising rates, home prices have declined as borrowing costs increase. The rise in rates has sent mortgage applications tumbling to their lowest level in almost three decades, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.
Persons: Bond, Organizations: Mortgage, Service, Mortgage News, Treasury, Association, National Association of Realtors
Mortgage rates last week rose for the sixth straight week, causing demand for home loans to drop to the lowest level since 1995. Total application volume fell 6.9% compared with the previous week, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association's seasonally adjusted index. Applications for a mortgage to purchase a home dropped 6% week to week and were 21% lower than the same week one year ago. ARMs offer lower rates and can be fixed for up to 10 years before the rate resets. Mortgage rates moved even higher to start this week, with the 30-year fixed hitting 7.92% on Tuesday, according to Mortgage News Daily.
Persons: Joel Kan Organizations: Lennar Corporation, Mortgage, Mortgage News, CNBC Locations: Morristown, Morristown , New Jersey
The average rate on the popular 30-year fixed mortgage rate hit 8% Wednesday morning, according to Mortgage News Daily. Mortgage rates follow loosely the yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury . Rates rose sharply this week and last week, as investors digest more reads on the economy. On Wednesday, it was housing starts, which rose in September, though not as much as expected, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. These higher rates have caused mortgage demand to plummet, as applications fell nearly 7% last week from the previous week, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.
Persons: Matthew Graham, Horton Organizations: Mortgage News, Treasury, . Census, Federal, Mortgage, Association, CNBC
Rates on the 30-year fixed mortgage hit 7.92% on Tuesday, Mortgage News Daily's Rate Index showed. High mortgage rates, expensive home prices, and low inventory have strained the US housing market. AdvertisementAdvertisementThe average rates on the 30-year fixed mortgage hit 7.92% on Tuesday, according to Mortgage News Daily's index. Rates on the 30-year fixed mortgage hit 7.92% on October 17. It's helped fuel a lock-in effect for current homeowners unwilling to move homes due to having previously secured a lower mortgage rate, keeping both sellers and buyers off the market.
Persons: , they've, Redfin Organizations: Mortgage, Service, Mortgage News Daily Mortgage, Federal
Stubbornly high mortgage rates have taken a toll on builder sentiment, the group said. AdvertisementAdvertisementHomebuilder confidence just plunged to its lowest mark in 10 months, the National Association of Home Builders announced on Tuesday. The group cited stubbornly high mortgage rates as the primary drag on confidence. On Tuesday, rates on the 30-year fixed mortgage hit 7.92%, according to Mortgage News Daily's index. Buyers and sellers alike have largely been kept on the sidelines as mortgage rates hover near multi-decade highs and moving homes looks unattractive.
Persons: , Alicia Huey, Robert Dietz, Dietz Organizations: Service, National Association of Home Builders, Market, Mortgage, Builders, Federal Locations: Wells Fargo
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailHome affordability initiatives need to come at the fiscal level, says MBS Lives' Matthew GrahamMatthew Graham, chief operating officer at Mortgage News Daily, and CNBC's Diana Olick join 'The Exchange' to discuss mortgage rates correlating with the ten-year and pricing off mortgage-backed securities, mortgage rates hitting a 23-year high, and initiatives that could help home affordability without manipulating the broader financial market.
Persons: Matthew Graham Matthew Graham, Diana Olick Organizations: Mortgage News Daily
"As a result, mortgage applications ground to a halt, dropping to the lowest level since 1996." Just two years ago, when rates were setting multiple record lows, refinance demand made up roughly three-quarters of all mortgage applications. The ARMs made up 8% of purchase applications, up from 6.7% about a month ago, when interest rates were slightly lower. ARM's offer lower rates but are fixed for a shorter term, usually five or 10 years. Investors are responding to better-than-expected economic data, which could push the Federal Reserve to be more aggressive in its higher interest rate policy.
Persons: Joel Kan, Refinances, Kan Organizations: Mortgage, Federal Reserve
The average rate on the popular 30-year fixed mortgage rose to 7.72% on Tuesday, according to Mortgage News Daily. Mortgage rates follow loosely the yield on the 10-year Treasury , which has been climbing this week following strong economic data. Rates have not been this high since the end of 2000. At the beginning of this year, the 30-year fixed rate dropped to about 6%, causing a brief burst of activity in the spring housing market. While builders had been benefiting from the tight supply of existing homes for sale, higher mortgage rates are a major concern now.
Persons: Matthew Graham Organizations: Mortgage News Daily ., Treasury, Federal Reserve, Investors, Mortgage News
Mortgage interest rates just hit a level not seen since the year 2000. The 30-year fixed jumbo mortgage rate increased to 7.34%, the highest rate in the history of the MBA's jumbo rate series dating back to 2011. After record low interest rates throughout the first few years of the pandemic, and a refinance boom, there are precious few borrowers now with mortgage rates high enough to benefit from a refinance. Today's potential buyers are facing an unprecedented dynamic of a historically low supply of homes for sale, coupled with both rising interest rates and rising prices. Interest rates continued to move higher this week, according to a separate survey from Mortgage News Daily.
Persons: Joel Kan Organizations: Mortgage, Market, Mortgage News
Sales of newly built homes fell 8.7% in August from July, to a seasonally adjusted annualized pace of 675,000 units, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. The Census count is based on signed contracts during the month, and mortgage rates took a sharp jump higher. The median price of a newly built home sold in August was $430,300, a drop of 2% compared with August of last year. Homebuilders have been lowering prices as well as offering more incentives, like buying down mortgage rates. One of the nation's largest homebuilders, Lennar, recently reported strong earnings, but that was for a quarter where mortgage rates hadn't hit their highest yet.
Persons: Imogen Pattison, Homebuilders, Stuart Miller, Miller, Robert Dietz, NAHB's Organizations: . Census, Mortgage News, Capital Economics, National Association of Home Builders
Price growth for US homes bounced back this summer from its lowest level in over a decade, according to a new report from real estate data provider CoreLogic. Rising mortgage rates have hurt mortgage demand. 10 undervalued markets for homebuyers to look in nowIn addition to sharing their latest Home Price Index report, CoreLogic also shared exclusive data with Insider about which US housing markets are most undervalued right now. Below are 10 undervalued metropolitan areas in the US, according to CoreLogic, along with each's home price index change from the last 12 months as of July and forecasted home price index change. The cities are listed in descending order by expected home price index change.
Persons: Price, Selma Hepp, Hepp, CoreLogic Organizations: Mortgage, New, West : Locations: California , Washington, Massachusetts, Miami , Florida, St, Louis , Missouri, Detroit , Michigan, Northeast, Vermont, New Hampshire, New Jersey, West, West : Idaho, Nevada, Montana, Washington, Arizona, Utah, Oregon, Colorado, Texas, Wyoming, California, CoreLogic
Higher mortgage rates continue to take their toll on mortgage demand, especially for refinancing. Total mortgage application volume dropped 0.8% last week compared to the previous week, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association's seasonally adjusted index. The refinance share of mortgage activity decreased to 29.1% of total applications from 30.0% the previous week. ARMs offer lower interest rates but are deemed riskier because their rates are fixed for a shorter term. "Mortgage applications decreased for the seventh time in eight weeks, reaching the lowest level since 1996," said Joel Kan, a Mortgage Bankers Association economist, in a release.
Persons: Joel Kan, Matthew Graham Organizations: Mortgage, refinances, Mortgage Bankers Association, Mortgage News
The Fed may have broken the US housing market, according to top economist Mohamed El-Erian. That's because interest rate hikes have helped drive up mortgage rates, weighing on both supply and demand. High rates have frozen the housing market over the past year by crimping both supply and demand. AdvertisementAdvertisement"When you go from record-low mortgage rates to levels that we haven't seen for almost 20 years, you've destroyed both demand and supply. That is the way you destroy the housing market," El Erian said.
Persons: Mohamed El, you've, El Erian, We've Organizations: Service, Allianz, CNBC, Mortgage News Daily, US Locations: Wall, Silicon, El
The downturn in the US housing market isn't ending anytime soon, Fannie Mae warned. That's because mortgage rates are set to stay elevated if the US avoids a recession. The government-sponsored mortgage giant highlighted the stagnant US housing market, with existing home sales down 18.9% year per-year in June, according to Fannie Mae's estimate. That slowdown has largely been spurred by high mortgage rates, which have pushed buyers and sellers out of the market. AdvertisementAdvertisementExperts say housing conditions are unlikely to improve until mortgage rates dial back to the 5% range.
Persons: Fannie Mae, Fannie Mae's Organizations: Service, Mortgage News Locations: Wall, Silicon
Mortgage rates jumped last week to the highest level in 23 years, pushing mortgage demand from homebuyers to the lowest level in 28 years. Total mortgage application volume fell 4.2% last week, compared with the previous week, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association's seasonally adjusted index. Potential buyers are dealing not only with high interest rates and high prices, but extremely low supply. "Some homebuyers are looking to lower their monthly payments by accepting some interest rate risk after the initial fixed period," noted Kan. Mortgage rates continued to climb this week and are now right around 7.5% according to Mortgage News Daily.
Persons: Joel Kan, Kan Organizations: Mortgage, Treasury, National Association of Realtors, Mortgage News Locations: homebuyers
Americans need to spend nearly half of their income to afford a home as mortgage rates soar, a market expert said. "US housing affordability is worse today than the peak of the last housing bubble," Charlie Bilello said. The average rate on the 30-year fixed mortgage jumped this week to a 23-year high of 7.48%, per Mortgage News Daily. Mortgage rates have climbed in response to the Federal Reserve's steep interest-rate increases over the past six quarters to combat inflation. "US housing affordability is worse today than the peak of the last housing bubble.
Persons: Charlie Bilello Organizations: Mortgage, Service, Privacy, Mortgage News, Creative Planning Locations: Wall, Silicon
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