Mortgage Rates Continue to Fall
Average interest on long-term mortgages slid to a record low for the eighth time in nine weeks and could dip more. Freddie Mac reports that 30-year fixed loans averaged 4.36 percent this week, down from 4.42 percent a week ago; the 15-year fixed rate fell to a new low of 3.86 percent from 3.90 percent; and adjustable-rate mortgages were also below 4 percent.
The Mortgage Bankers Association’s Michael Fratantoni said the group expects that rates “will begin to rise as the economic situation improves along with jobs.”
Source: Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, Sam Spatter (08/27/10)
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Long-Term Mortgages Near Record Low
Thirty-year, fixed-rate mortgages moved closer to the all-time low of 4.82 percent reached in May, falling to 4.87 percent this week from 4.94 percent a week ago, according to Freddie Mac. Home owners who refinance have an opportunity to reduce their payment on a 30-year, fixed-rate loan for $200,000 by nearly $134 a month from a year ago, when long-term rates averaged 5.94 percent. Other mortgage averages were as follows:
* 15-year loans fell to 4.33 percent.
* Five-year adjustable-rate mortgages dropped to 4.35 percent.
* One-year ARMs rose to 4.53 percent.
Source: Chicago Sun-Times, Francine Knowles
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