US
mortgage rates edge closer to record low
Thu May 27, 2010 11:17am EDT
By Julie Haviv
NEW
YORK
May 27 (Reuters) - U.S. mortgage rates moved still lower in the past week,
nearing a record low set in early December, according to a survey released on
Thursday by Freddie Mac (FRE.P)(FRE.N),
the second-largest U.S. mortgage finance company.
Interest
rates on 30-year fixed-rate mortgages, the most widely used loan, averaged 4.78
percent for the week ended May 27, down from last week's 4.84 percent, the
survey showed.
Lower rates
should buoy home loan refinancing activity, putting more cash into consumers'
hands to funnel into the U.S.
economy as it recovers from the worst recession in 70 years.
Lower rates
also make homes more affordable during the spring selling season -- the
industry's most important period.
This week's
30-year rate is below the year-ago level of 4.91 percent and also the lowest
since the week ended Dec. 3, 2009 when it hit a record low of 4.71 percent.
Mortgage
rates are linked to yields on Treasuries and yields on mortgage-backed
securities. Freddie Mac started the survey in 1971.
"These
low rates will help to elevate home-buyer affordability and soften the effects
of the sunset of the home-buyer tax credit," Frank Nothaft,
Freddie Mac vice president and chief economist, said in a statement.
Recent
robust data on pending, new and existing home sales show a sector that has
benefited from the federal government's home buyer tax credit that just
expired.
To take
advantage of the $8,000 first-time buyer credit or a $6,500 credit for existing
owners buying a new residence, people had to sign purchase contracts by April
30 and must close by June 30.
While
demand for home purchase loans has slumped since the tax credits expired,
demand for home refinancing loans has jumped, said Michael Moskowitz, president
of Equity Now, a direct lender based in New
York and licensed in eight states.
"The
drop in mortgage rates could not have come at a better time for the housing market,"
he said. "Better affordability, in my opinion, should have a stronger
impact on housing demand than the tax credits."
LOW RATES,
MIXED DEMAND
The Mortgage
Bankers Association said on Wednesday that applications to refinance home loans
jumped to a seven-month high last week as rates neared record lows but purchase
demand was stuck at a 13-year low.
Freddie Mac
said the 15-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 4.21 percent, down from 4.24
percent last week and the lowest since Freddie Mac started tracking the
mortgage type in August 1991.
One-year
adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs) were 3.95 percent, down from 4.00 percent last
week and the lowest since the week ended May 27, 2004.
But the rate
on the 5/1 ARM, set at a fixed rate for five years and adjustable each
following year, was 3.97 percent, slightly higher than the 3.91 percent last
week.
A year ago,
15-year mortgages averaged 4.53 percent, the one-year ARM was 4.69 percent and
the 5/1 ARM was 4.82 percent. (Editing by John
O'Callaghan)