Mortgage Rates - "Down go mortgage costs despite latest cut in Fed's rate-lowering stimulus program. ... Mortgage rate freakout a year ago proved unfounded." ...
Mortgage Rates:
As a result of that announcement ... and the near-panic it engendered in some corners ... interest rates that week jumped from 3.93% to 4.46%, the biggest one-week jump since the late 1980's. Many forecasters were certain the real estate market had been prematurely euthanized. What actually occurred has been quite different than what these folks expected. This last week, average interest rates were reported being offered on 30-year fixed products at 4.14%, down from 4.17% the week before. When you turn that number into actual rates offered to buyers, it means a 30-year fixed rate loan at 4.125%, as opposed to 4.5% last year at this time. That's nearly $1,000 less in payments on a yearly basis than folks were paying in June of 2013. Here's a really comprehensive article by E. Scott Reckard from today's Los Angeles Times:
Mortgage Rates:
Loan Rates Down Over Last Year
Mortgage Rate Panic Of Last Year Fades
Last year at this time, market watchers were basically freaking out with predictions of skyrocketing home loan interest rates. In June of 2013 the Federal Reserve announced that it was pulling back on a stimulus program that had been seen as helping to keep rates very low. When the announcement came, many "in the know" were convinced we'd see a jump in rates that could kill the recovering real estate market.As a result of that announcement ... and the near-panic it engendered in some corners ... interest rates that week jumped from 3.93% to 4.46%, the biggest one-week jump since the late 1980's. Many forecasters were certain the real estate market had been prematurely euthanized. What actually occurred has been quite different than what these folks expected. This last week, average interest rates were reported being offered on 30-year fixed products at 4.14%, down from 4.17% the week before. When you turn that number into actual rates offered to buyers, it means a 30-year fixed rate loan at 4.125%, as opposed to 4.5% last year at this time. That's nearly $1,000 less in payments on a yearly basis than folks were paying in June of 2013. Here's a really comprehensive article by E. Scott Reckard from today's Los Angeles Times:
Freddie Mac: Mortgage rates down again despite new cut in Fed stimulus | L.A. Times
Los Angeles TimesThe great rate freakout of June 2013 looks awfully panicky in the rearview mirror, with fixed mortgages now far cheaper than they were back then. It's been a full year since the Federal Reserve unnerved home lenders and buyers by announcing it would choke back a stimulus program that had sent long-term borrowing costs to record lows." ...Read More Here: http://www.latimes.com/business/money/la-fi-re-freddie-mac-mortgage-rates-20140626-story.html