Mortgage Market Update: Will Tuesday’s housing starts report show an increase?

Mortgage Market Weekly Update
Information in this post is provided by Ron McGowan, Senior Mortgage Consultant with PrimeLending. He is a guest blogger who provides us information from a lender’s perspective. For additional information on Ron, please visit his website at ILoanSanDiego.com.
Inside Lending Newsletter from Ron McGowan for the week of September 20, 2010
Market Update
INFO THAT HITS US WHERE WE LIVE…Fannie Mae released a survey showing 70% of those polled in June and July feel now is a good time to buy a home. This is up from a 64% reading in January. At the same time, 83% of those surveyed think it’s a bad time to sell, which isn’t such a terrible thing, since there’s still plenty of inventory for buyers to choose from.
Another group of industry observers concluded that sales of existing homes hit bottom in July and will rebound in the fall. They based this on recent reports for purchase mortgage applications and pending home sales, which track signed purchase contracts for existing homes.
The fact remains, homes are now more affordable for more people than they’ve been in years. Today’s historically low mortgage rates make monthly payments much easier to work into the family budget. Read the rest of this entry »
How will housing data influence rates the week of August 16?

Mortgage Market Weekly Update
Information in this post is provided by Greg Wickstrand, Home Loan Consultant for HomeServices Lending. He is a guest blogger who provides us information from a lender’s perspective. For additional posts by Greg, please visit his BLOG.
What’s Ahead for Mortgage Rates this Week: August 16, 2010
By: Greg Wickstrand
Mortgage markets worsened last week, putting a pause on the mortgage rate rally that dates to mid-April. Mortgage rates rose last week and home affordability suffered.
The Refi Boom remains in full effect, but rates are not as dazzling as they were a week ago.
It’s somewhat strange that mortgage rates rose last week given the heavy dose of negative-bending news.
- The Federal Reserve noted that the economy “has slowed“
- New unemployment claims rose to a 6-month high
- Retail sales — excluding auto sales — rose less than expected
Mortgage rates often to fall on such news, but last week, they rose. The biggest reason was weak demand on a new 30-year bond issuance from the government. Read the rest of this entry »
Mortgage Market Update and Forecast for the Week of August 2, 2010

Mortgage Market Update
Information in this post is provided by Ron McGowan, Senior Mortgage Consultant with PrimeLending. He is a guest blogger who provides us information from a lender’s perspective. For additional information on Ron, please visit his website at ILoanSanDiego.com.
Inside Lending Newsletter from Ron McGowan for the week of August 2, 2010
Market Update
INFO THAT HITS US WHERE WE LIVE…Last week began nicely with June New Home Sales UP 23.6% to an annual rate of 330,000, well ahead of expectations. This was a sharp rebound from May when New Home Sales sank to record lows not seen since 1963. This volatility of course is all about the homebuyer tax credit (requiring a contract by April 30 and a closing by June 30, now extended to September 30). Consequently, new homes sold at a 422,000 pace in April, fell to a 267,000 pace in May, then went to 330,000 in June.
Demographic trends say sales should continue to rebound, as we eventually need to sell new homes at a 950,000 annual rate to meet population growth and replace teardowns. The supply of unsold new homes is now down to 7.6 months, just above the ideal 6-month level. Actual inventories are down to 210,000, their lowest level since 1968, when there were 35% fewer people around.
We also saw that home prices rose 4.6% in May, year-over-year, as tracked by the Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller National Home Price Indices. Read the rest of this entry »





