Sunday, December 21, 2008

LOW rates!

Rates Hit the Lowest Point of My Lifetime

Friday, mortgage rates dropped to the low point of our generation with the 30 year fixed hitting 4.25% in the morning before rising by day's end back up to 4.625% where it stands today. Rates rose Friday afternoon out of sheer reaction to how many people locked in to rates in the morning. These dramatically low rates are the reaction of the following series of events that occurred earlier in the week:

1. Tuesday's very favorable CPI inflation report showed prices dropping sharply and, for now, inflation is not a concern for investors.

2. Tuesday's Housing Starts report showed a 19% decline to a record low of 625K annual units, far below the consensus forecast of 730K. Building Permits, a leading indicator, showed a similar decline. To give you a contrast, Housing Starts were running at a 2.2 million unit annual pace in early 2006. On a favorable note, the slowdown in the building of new homes will help reduce the inventory of unsold homes on the market.

3. Friday, the Fed cut the Fed Fund rate from 1.0% to nearly 0.0% and suggested that they might purchase large quantities of Mortgage Backed Securities and Treasuries (over and above the previously announced $500 billion plan) to help keep mortgage rates low. The Fed's statement confirmed that economic conditions have worsened recently and suggested that rates will remain at extremely low levels for an extended period of time.

Article Courtesy of James Williamson, Fairfield Mortgage

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