U.S mortgage rates rose for a 4rd consecutive week, in the week ending 20th September, with mortgage rates hitting their highest levels since the beginning of May, 4 weeks of rises reversing 3 previous weeks of decline with interest.
Freddie Mac weekly average rates for new mortgages as of 20th September were quoted to be:
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30-year fixed rate loan increased from 4.6% to 4.65% in the week, while up from 3.83% a year ago. The average fee remained unchanged at 0.5 points.
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15-year fixed rates rose from 4.06% to 4.11% in the week, while up from 3.13% from a year ago. The average fee remained unchanged at 0.5 points.
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5-year fixed rates slipped from 3.93% to 3.92% in the week, while up from last year’s 3.13%. The average rose from 0.3 points to 0.4 points.
Mortgage Bankers’ Association Rates for the week ending 14th September were quoted to be:
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Average interest rates for 30-year fixed, backed by the FHA, increased from 4.84% to 4.90%, with points increasing from 0.51 to 0.73 (incl. origination fee) for 80% LTV loans.
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Average interest rates for 30-year fixed with conforming loan balances increased from 4.84% to 4.88%, its highest level since April 2011, with points falling from 0.46 to 0.44 (incl. origination fee) for 80% LTV loans..
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Average 30-year rates for jumbo loan balances increased from 4.72% to 4.77%, with points easing from 0.47 to 0.28 (incl. origination fee) for 80% LTV loans.
Weekly figures released by the Mortgage bankers Association showed that the Market Composite Index, which is a measure of mortgage loan application volume, rose by 1.6%, reversing most of the previous week’s 1.8% decline, week-on-week.
The Refinance Index jumped by 4%, in the week ending 14th September, partially reversing the previous week’s 6% slide, with the share of refinance mortgages rising from 37.8% to 39.0%.
The upward move in mortgage and refinance applications comes as the FED looks to push ahead on its path towards monetary policy normalization, economic indicators out of the U.S continuing to point towards a robust economy, with wage growth kicking in and labour market conditions tightening further, the weekly jobless claims number sitting at a 49-year low.
Through the week, key stats released out of the U.S included September’s Philly FED Manufacturing Index figure, which rebounded in spite of the ongoing trade war with China, easing concerns over an immediate impact on the U.S economy, while supporting a possible December rate hike off the back of a priced in hike by the FED on Wednesday.
August housing sector stats were mixed, according to figures released through the week, with existing home sales flat, following a 0.7% fall in July, while housing starts surged by 9.2%, wiping out most of June’s 12.3% slide. On the downside for the sector was a 5.7% fall in building permits in August, which raises more red flags for the real estate sector in general.