Subscribe to this blog

Subscribe to full feed RSS
What the? RSS?!

Subscribe Via Email

We respect your privacy.
Archive for May, 2008

Jumbo Loan Options Expanding

By admin On May 11, 2008 Comments Off

Millions of Americans have started to receive their rebate checks from the government in the mail over the past few weeks. This part of the economic stimulus package has received the most attention in the news, however there is another key benefit of the program that has also begun to trickle through. The legislation has also allowed for home owners hwo have jumbo loans to refinance these loans under conventional financing terms.

This new alternative should be welcome news to  anyone who has a mortgage that is over 417k. The spread between conventional loan rates and jumbo loan rates has been in excess of two percent form the better part of the past six months. The secondary market for jumbo loan financing has all but disappeared and the result has been a dramatic increase with the mortgage rates on jumbo loans. Lenders such as CitMortgage, Countrwide and IndyMac are now able to qualify home owners in select counties for loan sizes up to $729,000 and have their loans underwritten and sold to either Fannie Mae of Freddie Mac. This is welcome news for anyone owning a home above $450,000 as this should help to bring some home buyers into this marketplace and provide realistic refinance options for home owners who may have chosen an adjustible rate mortgage a few years back.


How could Yahoo stock effect mortgage rates

By admin On May 5, 2008 Comments Off

The stock market could be under pressure from the fallout of the Yahoo & Microsoft merger.  So what does this have to do with mortgage rates? The connection is strictly tied with investment dollars and decisions. When the stock market is doing well and investors are purchasing equities you tend to see mortgage rates increase as investors pull their money out of the safer bond market and invest in equities such as stocks.

The flipside of this analogy is that when investors are concerned about the direction of their equity investments or perceive higher risk in the stock market they tend to invest into the bond market. When this happens you tend to see mortgage rates decrease. Their is not always a direct correlation between the ten year bond and mortgage rates but this is a common index that investors follow when they are trying to follow the direction of which mortgage rates are heading.

Home owners or potential home owners who are shopping for a mortgage and must determine whether or not to lock or float their interest rate can use the stock market to help gauge what direction interest rates are heading but should be cautious that no one can predict where rates are moving and economic and investor news comes out on a daily basis that can change the markets direction.


Fed cuts key rate

By admin On May 1, 2008 Comments Off

The Federal Reserve as expected cut the fed funds rate by .25% lowering the key rate down to 2%. This translates over to a prime rate of 5%. The move was expected by most economists who recognize that the fed is facing an increasingly difficult task of balancing rates and economic growth.

The fed was non committal on whether they would continue lowering the fed funds rate this year. Despite a struggling real estate market the fed is now faced with record oil prices and must juggle the impact this could have with inflation. Additionaly, the fed is under pressure as the U.S. dollar continues to decline. The economy has been quite resiliant despite the struggles in the housing industry. Mortgage rates typically do not move when the fed cuts the fed funds rate, however yesterday after the announcement their was a slight decline in the bond market which would be good news for mortgage rates and those considering a refinance.