Refinance volume drove total mortgage application activity 3.8%
higher last week compared with the previous week, according to the
Mortgage Bankers Association’s seasonally adjusted index. Volume was 63%
higher than the same week one year ago.
Applications
to refinance a home loan jumped 9% for the week and were 146% higher
than the same week one year ago. The average rate on the 30-year fixed
was 98 basis points higher a year ago. The refinance share of mortgage
activity increased to 62.4 percent of total applications from 59.0
percent the previous week.
Refinance volume has been incredibly
strong all year — 17% of the total active mortgage market, according to
real estate analytics company Black Knight. A growing number of
borrowers is now doing cash-out refinances, something that was unpopular
over the last decade of the housing recovery.
Mortgage rates were
essentially flat last week from the previous week, with the average
contract interest rate for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages with conforming
loan balances ($484,350 or less) increasing to 3.98% from 3.97%, with
points increasing to 0.33 from 0.32 (including the origination fee) for
loans with a 20% down payment.
“The 30-year fixed mortgage rate
remained under 4% for the fourth straight week, and rates for FHA loans
declined close to their lowest level of the year,” said Joel Kan, MBA’s
associate vice president of economic and industry forecasting. “The
decrease in FHA rates led to a 27% jump in refinance applications for
those loans, and their share of refinance activity — at 14%— was the
highest since 2016.”
Mortgage applications to purchase a home fell 0.4% for the week but were 5% higher than a year ago.
While economic conditions may be favorable, the current for-sale
market is not. The housing shortage is getting worse, as fewer homes
than normal came on the fall market. Supply is leanest at the lower end
of the market, where demand is strongest.
Mortgage rates have been
moving in a narrow range lately, and Wednesday afternoon’s announcement
on interest rates by the Federal Reserve is not expected to change
that. Rates are going to be much more responsive to the Dec. 15 deadline for additional U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods.
“In
general, a delay or cancellation would be bad for rates, but markets
are already expecting a delay to some extent,” wrote Matthew Graham,
chief operating officer at Mortgage News Daily. “The bigger deal would
be waking up Monday morning of next week to find the tariff hike had
been implemented. In that case, rates would likely benefit (i.e. move
lower!).”
No comments:
Post a Comment