Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Mortgage Rates Hold Steady!



By DREW FITZGERALD And JOHN KELL




Mortgage rates changed little in the past week, snapping a streak of weekly declines that had taken fixed rates to the lowest points of 2011, according to the latest survey from Freddie Mac.

While the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage rate ticked up to 4.50% in the week ended Thursday from 4.49% last week, still well below last year's 4.75% average, rates on 15-year fixed-rate mortgages ticked down to 3.67% from 3.68% the previous week and 4.20% a year earlier.

Mortgage rates generally track Treasury yields, which move inversely to Treasury prices. Rates have slumped for months as yields on Treasurys slid amid economic uncertainty.

Freddie Chief Economist Frank Nothaft said mortgage rates held relatively steady after market participants shrugged off recent reports that inflation was picking up because the increases have been in line with expectations.

Home mortgage debt has been declining, especially through second mortgages, according to the Federal Reserve. Household mortgage balances fell by more than $930 billion from the March 2008 peak through this past March, with second mortgages accounting for $820 billion of that.

Meantime, the Mortgage Bankers Association on Wednesday said the volume of mortgage applications jumped a seasonally adjusted 13% last week from the previous week. Refinancing activity jumped nearly 17%, according to the weekly survey, which covers more than half of all U.S. retail residential mortgage applications. Purchasing activity rose 4.5% in the week ended last Friday.

In the latest week, five-year Treasury-indexed hybrid adjustable-rate mortgages fell to 3.27% from 3.28% last week and 3.89% a year earlier. One-year Treasury-indexed ARM rates rose to 2.97% from 2.95% the prior week but still down from 3.82% a year earlier.

To obtain the rates, fixed-rate borrowers required an average payment of 0.7 point. The five-year hybrid adjustable rate mortgages required a 0.6-point payment, while one-year adjustable-rate mortgages required a 0.5-point payment. A point is 1% of the mortgage amount, charged as prepaid interest.

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