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Mortgage Rates Heading Near 7% -> Housing Rebound Imminent
By:
TraderMark
Thursday, July 24, 2008 4:33 PM
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The average interest rate for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages
rose to 6.71 percent on Tuesday, from 6.44 percent on Friday
, according to HSH Associates, a publisher of consumer rates.
The average rate for so-called
jumbo loans
, which cannot be sold to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac,
was 7.8 percent
, the highest since December 2000.
Loan rates are rising because of concern in the financial markets about the future of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
, which own or guarantee nearly half of the nation’s $12 trillion mortgage market. The federal government has proposed a rescue, and has urged Congress to approve it quickly.
But bond investors,
worried that the companies may not be as big a support to the market as they have been, are driving up interest rates on securities backed by home loans
. That added cost is being passed on to consumers through the mortgage markets.
“
When we get to rate levels like this, the market just shuts down,
” Mr. Barnes said. (
in the early to mid 80s these levels would of seemed like an absolute gift, but we've been conditioned on Uncle Alan Greenspan monopoly money so it seems like purgatory to pay high 6%! The horror!
) While mortgage rates remain relatively low by historical standards,
they are higher than what homeowners and the economy became accustomed to during the recent housing boom
. (
and bingo was his name-o
)
Inflation, which tends to send bond prices down and bond rates up, is another concern
(
this was my first concern as outlined in
(
Jun 12: Higher Inflation Expectations? Higher Mortgage Rates Coming
)
but hey let's throw in the nationalization of Fannie and Freddie on top of it
)
I don't write about this subject that much anymore because the "recovery" is so far off it is just wasting time and space to go into it each week. Just remember, incomes need to fall into some relation with home prices. The era of buying $350K homes on $45K salary is over. (
Apr 26: Bankrate.com - Average Joe Still Can't Afford a Home
) If you are a newer reader - stare at the chart
in this entry I wrote in April
, about how out of whack home prices have gotten in relation to the previous 100 years. Reversion to the mean - it's cool.
This whole epedemic is courtesy of your "no regulation needed, consumers don't need protections and will figure it out, securitization is a cool thing" era. So as prices come back in line, by (market) force, which the government cannot socialize as it is trying to do with everything else - all these underlying assets these banks (the current golden children of the stock market) hold will continue to blow up. And this is why this is "not" the bottom. Nor will it be next kitchen sink quarter. Nor the one after that. Nor the one after that. Or the one after that. (short of national moratoriums on foreclosures - folks don't count it out - it's not a free market anymore) They are all oversold rallies to be sold/shorted. And if interest rates peak over 7% and/or go to 8%? Well then I am being an optimist and keep layering on kitchen sink quarters for another 4-6 quarters past end of 2009. Our banking system will be much smaller by the time we get "there".
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(4)
7/24/2008 2:51:03 PM
The Great Correction
by
Richard Greenwood
We are in the midst of "The Great Correction" as significant in it's own special way as the Great Depression. We are no where near the end of this.
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7/24/2008 9:03:09 PM
Alan Not Guilty
by
Alan
Remember, Alan Greespan is in no way responsible for the current economic mess. Repeat this daily. AG http://www.fiendbear.com/guestpg1.htm
Reply
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7/24/2008 2:51:03 PM
The Great Correction
by
Richard Greenwood
We are in the midst of "The Great Correction" as significant in it's own special way as the Great Depression. We are no where near the end of this.
Reply
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0
)
(
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)
7/24/2008 9:03:09 PM
Alan Not Guilty
by
Alan
Remember, Alan Greespan is in no way responsible for the current economic mess. Repeat this daily. AG http://www.fiendbear.com/guestpg1.htm
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