Rising Interest Rates Could Derail Strong Demand For Mortgage Applications

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Rising Interest Rates Could Derail Strong Demand For Mortgage Applications



Home shoppers who are planning to apply for a mortgage might want to hurry before the window closes on a good deal heading into the spring home buying season.

Although they remain low, mortgage rates have begun to increase and are expected to rise further later in the year. The average cost of a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage rose to 3.18% from last week’s 3.05%, according to Bankrate.com’s national survey of lenders.

Home buyers and homeowners have been taking advantage of record low mortgage interest rates that have helped keep their monthly mortgage payments down. But rising rates indicate a pullback in demand.

Mortgage applications decreased 11.4% from one week earlier, according to data from the Mortgage Bankers Association’s weekly mortgage applications survey for the week ending February 19.

“Mortgage rates have increased in six of the last eight weeks, with the benchmark 30-year fixed rate last week climbing above 3% to its highest level since September 2020,” said Joel Kan, the Mortgage Bankers Association’s associate vice president of economic and industry forecasting. “As a result of these higher rates, overall refinance activity fell 11% to its lowest level since December 2020, but remained 50% higher than a year ago. Additionally, the severe winter weather in Texas affected many households and lenders, causing more than a 40% drop in both purchase and refinance applications in the state last week.”

Added Kan, “The housing market in most of the country remains strong, with activity last week 7% higher than a year ago. The average loan size of purchase applications increased to a record $418,000, in line with the accelerating home-price growth caused by very low inventory levels.”

The economy is showing promising signs of improvement, especially in light of many millions of Americans already receiving Covid-19 vaccinations, according to Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the National Association of Realtors. Still, he cautioned that longer-term interest rates will soon rise, partly from the better economic prospects, but also due to rising inflationary expectations and higher budget deficits.

“I don’t foresee mortgage rates jumping to an alarming level, but we should prepare for a rise of at least a decimal point or two,” he said.

There has been a consistent rise in housing permits for single-family homes for eight straight months. According to Yun, this is a good sign that the supply and demand imbalance in the residential real estate market could be easing, as soon as mid-2021.

“There will also be a natural seasonal upswing in inventory in spring and summer after few new listings during the winter months,” he said. “These trends, along with an anticipated ramp-up in home construction will provide for much-needed supply.”

February’s severe winter weather, which crippled Texas and left a large portion of the country digging out from a series back-to-back storms, is affecting the housing market, already reeling from a record low number of homes for sale, according to realtor.com’s weekly housing trends report for the week ended February 20.

“With large swaths of the country reeling from back-to-back winter storms, the number of home sellers putting their homes up for sale declined by a larger margin last week,” said realtor.com chief economist Danielle Hale. “The relentless advance of the median home price was uninterrupted, and with housing supply seeming to bear the brunt of the storms’ impact, we expect to see continued supply-demand imbalance that will play out in higher home prices.”

The number of newly listed homes — a measure of sellers putting homes up for sale — continues to trail last year’s pace, ending the week 35% lower year over year. Realtor.com expects to see new listings grow in March and April as they traditionally do heading into the spring home buying season.

Realtor.com’s Housing Market Recovery Index, which reveals metro areas where the market has recovered or even exceeded prior trends, showed Austin, Texas; Denver; San Antonio; Riverside and Sacramento, California had experienced the most significant recovery as of February 13.

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/brenda...nd-for-mortgage-applications/?sh=3df8e94b36f0
 
Only people who are going to be hurting are the ones that overpaid for their home that are trying to sell. The higher the rate the less people can borrow.
And the reason I posted this is because of the ripple effect it is going to cause economically.

the stock market was hit hard today because of bond yields which is causing rates to increase. this is the second to last step before another great recession.
 
Will The U.S. Stock Market Crash Soon?


U.S. stock markets have experienced another brutal week. Inflation fear and soaring bond yields are some of the concerns that are trying to burst the higher stock valuation bubble. The Dow Jones Industrial Average, among two other stock indices—the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite—is the only index holding on to its yearly gains. The fear is that we could see an even more intense sell-off that could crash the stock market.



The Dow Jones Industrial Average is up 1.04%year-to-date (YTD), and it is down nearly 4.23% from its all-time high of 31,984 points in mid-February. The S&P 500 stock index is barely up YTD. Yesterday, the index erased all of its yearly gains, but traders were able to push the stock index into positive territory by the end of the day.

The Nasdaq Composite index is facing a brutal sell-off this year, and it is down nearly -3% YTD. The index is firmly in the correction territory as it has dropped over 10% from its all-time high of 13,879—formed on April 16 this year.

Why Stocks Are Falling
The fundamental factors that are causing the stock market to tank are fear of higher inflation and tech stock valuation. The reason is that dovish monetary policy (Fed buying assets and keeping interest rates at an all-time low) and stimulus support are aiding the economic recovery process.

Traders believe that the Fed will increase the interest rate, which could hurt the economic growth as economic recovery is still fragile. Simultaneously, some speculators also hold the view that inflation is getting out of control, and soon it will pass the Fed’s comfort level. This could prompt the Fed to take appropriate action, which could include tapering the asset purchase program.

However, the Federal Reserve Bank Chairman, Jerome Powell, has assured the market this week that the Fed can stomach higher inflation as it is likely to be a short-term issue. Stock traders are not buying into this narrative at all, and despite his best efforts, the U.S. stock market has been under tremendous selling pressure.

Is This A Stock Market Crash?
No, we can hardly say that. The U.S. stock market is in a healthy correction mode as fundamentals will only improve as more people get their vaccine shots. Coronavirus is the initial reason that the U.S. economy was brought to its knees.

So why are we saying the stock market is tanking?

To answer this, one needs to look at things more closely. The fact is that the S&P 500 is heavily influenced by tech stocks, and it is the tech sector that is facing more punishment due to valuations being too high. For instance, Apple constitutes nearly 10% of the S&P 500.

If we look at other sectors such as travel, airlines, banking, and energy, all of them have decent upward moves. Although, yesterday, apart from the energy sector, all other sectors were hit with sell orders.

Drilling further into this, it becomes clear that stocks like American Airlines, United Airlines, Delta Airlines, Marriot Hotels, IHG, Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan, Citibank, BP, Chevron, and Exxon Mobil, all have done a lot of heavy lifting this week. But, companies like Amazon, Apple, Facebook, Alibaba, Baidu, Tesla and Zoom are pushing the U.S. stock market lower.

Conclusion
Inflation fear is overblown; the U.S. economy still has a solid foundation. The Fed can adopt several strategies to address inflation and higher yields.

To conclude, tech stocks need to stop moving lower, and the rest of the sectors can push the stock market higher.


Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/naeema...e-us-stock-market-crash-soon/?sh=48559dd535bb
 
Bond yields going up + no stimulus + no job increase = very bad times ahead.

this is what happens when you have incompetent government officials (which we have in leadership now) with a clear lack of understanding economics. Short sellers are making a killing off of this mirror image of the housing market crash and the people still don’t see it. Classic long squeeze that will set back the millennials again, however the main group that will be hurt are the ones that caused this to begin with: late Gen-X and the Baby Boomers. If they don’t have their retirements set now, they will literally be working for the rest of their life.
 
Bond yields going up + no stimulus + no job increase = very bad times ahead.

this is what happens when you have incompetent government officials (which we have in leadership now) with a clear lack of understanding economics. Short sellers are making a killing off of this mirror image of the housing market crash and the people still don’t see it. Classic long squeeze that will set back the millennials again, however the main group that will be hurt are the ones that caused this to begin with: late Gen-X and the Baby Boomers. If they don’t have their retirements set now, they will literally be working for the rest of their life.


I agree with the first part of your statement but what does the current administration has to do with anything? :lol: They just took office. Shouldnt the finger be pointed at "the previous" administration? Naw your right Biden and his administration have really done some dumb shit in the few months he has been in office.



 
Only people who are going to be hurting are the ones that overpaid for their home that are trying to sell. The higher the rate the less people can borrow.
Well, if inflation rolls around like folk are thinking, that house you bought for $500k is now going for $700k. There is a win in here for black people if you play it right.
 
Bond yields going up + no stimulus + no job increase = very bad times ahead.

this is what happens when you have incompetent government officials (which we have in leadership now) with a clear lack of understanding economics. Short sellers are making a killing off of this mirror image of the housing market crash and the people still don’t see it. Classic long squeeze that will set back the millennials again, however the main group that will be hurt are the ones that caused this to begin with: late Gen-X and the Baby Boomers. If they don’t have their retirements set now, they will literally be working for the rest of their life.
Bonds go down
Stocks go up
 
I can see it now, people will stop buying houses and choose to live under a bridge instead :hmm:
 
I agree with the first part of your statement but what does the current administration has to do with anything? :lol: They just took office. Shouldnt the finger be pointed at "the previous" administration? Naw your right Biden and his administration have really done some dumb shit in the few months he has been in office.




9 months later, do you see why now?
 
not where i am

and interest rates wont have the affect that people think it is

because the problem is supply does not meet demand

prices will continue to go up

unless you live in undesireable mid west
Yeah, the forces of supply and demand are significant. From what I've been observing, a year ago, homes were selling in days for way over asking price. Homes have been sitting a little longer as compared to last year.

To your point, the market won't completely shut down.
 
Housing market has severely cooled off.

a few houses around me were under contract within 3 days spring/ summer.....

Now it takes about a week. But even then the houses are going for higher numbers.....a house you couldn't give away for $150K just sole for $180K and some change.

A fire destroyed this one house like 3 yrs ago. It was this past summer finally rehabbed and these mfkrs asked for $250K....and had numerous offers.....average home price back here 5 years ago was $165K-$175K range....only 4+ bedrooms were going for more than that. This is a 3bed 2 bath on a smaller lot.......

Needless to say, I've looked into Home Equity loans.......hahaha
 
But, you didn't answer his question when he asked months ago, cuz you're bullshitting. You say shit that indicates you are clearly running a disinformation campaign.
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It's the story of that loser Premium Saltine cracker's life


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Wells Fargo mortgage staff brace for layoffs as U.S. loan volumes collapse
PUBLISHED WED, NOV 2 20229:20 AM EDTUPDATED WED, NOV 2 202210:20 AM EDT
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WATCH LIVE
KEY POINTS
  • Mortgage volumes at Wells Fargo slowed further in recent weeks, leaving some workers idle and sparking concerns that the lender will need to cut more employees as the U.S. housing slump deepens.
  • The bank had about 18,000 loans in its retail origination pipeline in the early weeks of the fourth quarter, according to people with knowledge of the company’s figures. That is down as much as 90% from a year earlier, when the Covid pandemic-fueled housing boom was in full swing, said the people.
  • Employees are on edge after the bank began cutting workers in April and internal projections point to more departures.
 
I never understood tanking the housing market, making people homeless to get inflation under control. The politicians need to do their job and raise taxes, cut spending, or retire Federal Reserve Holdings.
 
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