What’s Ahead For Mortgage Rates This Week : November 30, 2009

Mortgage markets improved last week on stronger-than-expected economic data and safe haven buying.

The holiday-shortened trading week amplified what should have been modest gains into large ones.

Conforming mortgage rates dropped by about a quarter-percent last week, dropping them near their best levels of the year — and of all-time.

Oddly, mortgage rates are falling as the [...]

One Reason Why Mortgage Rates Are Back To All-Time Lows

Home affordability improved this week after the Federal Reserve released its November 3-4, 2009 meeting minutes.

The FOMC Minutes is a companion to the Federal Reserve’s post-meeting press release. It’s released 3 weeks after the Fed adjourns and details the internal debates that shape our nation’s monetary policy.

As compared to the press release, the minutes [...]

The Home Price Index Shows Home Values Increasing. Case-Shiller Agrees.

It’s official — home prices are no longer in free fall.

According to the Federal Housing Finance Agency, the Home Price Index posted its first quarterly increase since 2007 last quarter.

The news was reported Tuesday.

The Home Price Index is an interesting metric. It’s huge in its scope, accounting for every home sold in the [...]

Existing Home Sales Blow Past Expectations

Another month, another piece of evidence that the housing market is in recovery.

Existing Home Sales surged in October as the nation’s homebuyers took advantage of low mortgage rates, low list prices, and, for some, a generous tax credit.

Home resales are 23 percent higher versus a year ago and home supply is down to 7 months [...]

What’s Ahead For Mortgage Rates This Week : November 23, 2009

Mortgage markets worsened last week on a mixed bag of economic data. Inflation data came in soft, but so did the start of the holiday shopping season.

For the first time in a month, mortgage rates worsened last week, adding roughly 0.125 percent on conforming fixed-rate products, and a little bit more on ARMs.

Despite rates [...]

Should You Consider A 15-Year Fixed Mortgage?

For today’s home buyers and homeowners that can manage the higher monthly payments, 15-year fixed rate mortgage rates look attractive as compared to comparable 30-year products.

The 15-year/30-year interest rate spread is near its 5-year high.

Despite lower rates, however, homeowners opting for a 15-year fixed mortgage should be prepared for its higher monthly payments. This [...]

Housing Starts Are Down And Why It’s Terrific News For Sellers

A “Housing Start” is a home on which construction has started and, for the 4th straight month, national single-family housing starts held steady last month.

When the demand for homes grows faster than the number of homes for sale, prices increase.

As recent home sales data confirms, buyers currently outpace sellers and one consequence [...]

The 2010 Conforming Loan Limits

A conforming mortgage is one that, quite literally, conforms to the mortgage guidelines set forth by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac.

Each year, the government sets the maximum allowable loan size for a conforming mortgage, based on “typical” housing costs nationwide.

Loans in excess of this amount are typically called “jumbo”.

While home prices increased from [...]

Simple Real Estate Definitions : APR

APR is an acronym for Annual Percentage Rate. It’s a government-mandated calculation meant to simplify the comparison of mortgage options.

A loan’s APR can always be found in the top-left corner of the Federal Truth-In-Lending Disclosure.

Because APR is expressed as a percentage, many people confuse it for the loan’s interest rate. It’s not. [...]

What’s Ahead For Mortgage Rates This Week : November 16, 2009

Mortgage markets improved last week as foreign buyers of mortgage debt helped to push mortgage rates to a 4-week low.

It marked the 3rd consecutive week that rates improved, breathing extra life into this year’s ongoing Refi Boom.

Fixed-rate, conforming mortgage rates fell about 0.125 percent on the week. ARMs did about the same.

There wasn’t much data [...]