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Tag Archives: Mortgage Rates

FOMC Moves Modestly, Actions Expected to Keep Mortgage Rates Low

With a lone dissent, the Federal Open Market Committee Wednesday voted no change in the target federal funds rate but agreed to expand its program to stimulate the economy by purchasing Treasury securities. While voting no change in the target Fed Funds rate, the FOMC said it would purchase Treasury securities with remaining maturities of 6 years to 30 years at the current pace and to sell or redeem an equal amount of Treasury securities with remaining maturities of approximately 3 years or less. The action is expected to keep mortgage rates at record lows.

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Radar Logic: Prices Show Monthly Gain, but Improvements Won’t Last

While other experts and analysts have concluded home prices are on the rise and the recovery is under way, Radar Logic released a report challenging the upbeat viewpoint. The analytics firm stated in a report that it believes the oversupply of homes relative to demand will prevent sustained home price gains for some time. The argument made is that as buyers absorb the supply of homes for sale in certain markets and prices start to stabilize as a result, home owners who have been waiting on the sidelines to sell will do so once price start to improve. This will increase supply once again, and home prices will stop appreciating as supply exceeds demand.

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Fannie Mae: U.S. Economy Slows, Modest Growth Still Expected

The revised figures for economic growth in the year's first quarter were disappointing, but Fannie Mae's Economic & Strategic Research Group is still forecasting moderate growth for the remainder of 2012. A report released by the group Tuesday projected 2.2 percent growth for all of 2012. Several factors presented risks to the economic outlook, including a slowing trend in job growth, potential contagion in the euro zone from Greece's financial issues, the slowing Chinese economy, and the potential of a fiscal drag in the United States. Consumer attitudes also influence the economic outlook.

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Freddie Mac: Fixed Rates Bounce Up from Record Lows

Following an earlier survey from Zillow showing that the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage (FRM) had again hit a new low, Freddie Mac released on Thursday the results of its Primary Market Mortgage Survey (PMMS), which showed an increase in fixed mortgage rates after a month of a half of record lows. The PMMS found that the 30-year fixed for the week ending June 14 averaged 3.71 percent (0.7 point), an increase from 3.67 percent the previous week. This increase ended a six-week streak of falling rates. At the same time last year, the 30-year fixed rate averaged 4.50 percent.

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New Mortgages 20% More Likely to Default than Those from the ’90s

Investors and lenders should expect loans currently originated to have a 20 percent higher chance of default than those originated in the '90s due to current economic conditions, according to the University Financial Associates (UFA). The UFA Default Risk Index rose slightly to 120 in the second quarter of 2012 from 119 compared to the previous quarter. While loans currently originated are more likely to default than those from the '90s, loans originated today are still much less likely to default compared to vintages from 2006 to 2008.

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Warren Group: Refinancing Pushes New England Mortgage Activity

According to the data, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Rhode Island have all seen strong mortgage activity so far in 2012, with Massachusetts showing the strongest numbers. Activity in the state is up more than 28 percent, rising to 99,097 in the first four months of the year-an increase from 76,930 during the same period in 2011. Purchase mortgages increased almost 13 percent year-over-year to 13,376, while non-purchase (refinance) mortgages slid up 32 percent to 85,721.

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NFMC Clients Nearly Twice as Likely to Receive Mod, 1.3M Counseled

Through National Foreclosure Mitigation Counseling (NFMC), more than 1.3 million homeowners have received foreclosure prevention counseling by local nonprofits and state housing finance agencies since March 2008, NeighborWorks America announced Monday. So far, the NFMC has also received six appropriations from Congress totaling $619.87 million. According to a report, NFMC clients who had their payments modified saved an average of $176 more per month, and those who received help were nearly twice as likely to obtain a modification.

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Maternity Discrimination Complaint to Cost BofA More than $160K

The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) announced Thursday that Bank of America has agreed to pay $161,180 to settle allegations of maternity-based discrimination. A complaint had been filed by the Fair Housing Council of Orange County (FHCOC) against BofA alleging that one of its San Jose branches refused to refinance a woman's mortgage because she was on maternity leave. The Fair Housing Act prohibits discrimination in mortgage lending and real estate-related transactions based on race, color, national origin, religion, sex, family status, or disability.

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Fannie Mae: Positive Trends in Consumer Sentiment Leveling Off

Lulls in employment and income growth led to a plateau in consumer sentiment in May, according to Fannie Mae's May 2012 National Housing Survey. The data released by Fannie Mae on Thursday showed that although many consumers (72 percent) believe that now is a good time to purchase a house, the percentage of respondents who said they would buy a house after moving actually dropped for the second consecutive month-63 percent in May compared to 64 percent in April and 66 percent in March. Fifteen percent of respondents said now is a good time to sell a home.

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Fixed Rates Reach Record-Low Averages for 6th Consecutive Week

As the employment situation continues to raise concerns, fixed rates fell even lower, slipping yet again to new record-lows, according to a survey from Freddie Mac released Thursday. The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 3.67 percent (0.7 point) for the week ending June 7, falling from last week's average of 3.75 percent. The 15-year fixed rate declined even further below 3 percent to 2.94 percent (0.7 point), down from last week's 2.97 percent.

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