Housing, Mortgage Industries Could be in for Another Shaky Year


by Groshan Fabiola - Date: 2007-03-06 - Word Count: 547 Share This!

Despite all the positive forecasts predicting 2007 to be a rebounding year en route to a thriving market in the near future, more undeniable evidence mounts that suggests 2007 may not be much better then its predecessor.

The housing industry basically relies on the mortgage industry, especially as home prices have soared to never-before-seen highs. If people are not applying for mortgages, they are not buying homes, unless that mattress is full of thousand dollar bills.

The article, "Home loan demand drops despite decline in mortgage interest rates," posted February 7, 2007 on USA Today.com, explains how investors and economists may have reason to worry as a housing rebound probably is not in the near future.

Last year interest rates soared until it peaked at 6.88 percent in late June. Then they fell to under 6.2 percent and forecasters across the country began warning buyers to buy now because the market was rebounding from its correction.

The first month of the new year, you know the year things were supposed to begin heading in the right direction, has produced interesting results about what the immediate future of the overall real estate market will look like.

"The Mortgage Bankers Association said its seasonally adjusted index of mortgage application activity, which includes both refinancing and purchasing loans, dipped 0.2% the week ended Feb. 2 to 630.1."
That doesn't sound like a big deal but considering the market is struggling to head in the right direction, any mortgage origination decline carries extra weight.
"Phillip Neuhart, economic analyst at Wachovia in Charlotte, N.C., said the housing market is going through a ‘rocky stabilization' right now."
"‘The weather was certainly a factor in December, particularly housing starts, but that artificially inflated activity,' he said. ‘Also, builder incentives were helping sales.'"

The real reason the declining mortgage originations is depressing is due to the fact interest rates also dropped last week, which would ideally result in an increase in mortgage originations.

"Borrowing costs on 30-year fixed-rate mortgages, excluding fees, averaged 6.23% in the latest week, down 0.06 percentage point from the previous week and the first drop since early January."
"‘Housing seems to have the wind at its back with long-term interest rates, which were already in the low- to mid-sixes, falling slightly after last week's Fed announcement, so it's surprising to see that purchase activity actually tapered in the last week,' said Bob Walters, chief economist at Quicken Loans, an online mortgage lender in Livonia, Mich."

It has also recently been reported in numerous publications that interest rates are expected to rise to about 6.5 percent by summertime. If mortgage originations are down while interest rates are low and even declined, what will happen once rates shoot up another 0.3 percent?

"‘Folks with adjustable-rate mortgages see the opportunity, however, and are refinancing into fixed-rate mortgages before their existing mortgages reset to interest rates that are higher than current long-term rates,' said Walters."

If you plan on refinancing you should do so now before rates rise.
The one thing that is important to keep in mind though is that even though rates will rise during the summer that is also the time when home buyers tend to come out of their shells and become more active.

For more resources about home mortgage or even about mortgage calculator and especially about mortgage refinancing, please review these links.


Related Tags: mortgage refinancing, home mortgage, mortgage calculator

For more resources about home mortgage or even about mortgage calculator and especially about mortgage refinancing, please review these links.

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