Posts Tagged ‘rates’

WeeklyBasis: How Lenders Create Rate Sheets, European Debt To Drive Markets Next Week

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HOW LENDERS CREATE RATE SHEETS
Zero-point rates on loans up to $729k held at record lows for the second week last week even though mortgage bond levels might suggest rates would have dropped further. Jumbos also held steady at very attractive levels. Mortgage bonds benefitted as the EU/IMF’s $140b Greece bailout caused investors to sell European debt and buy more conservative U.S. mortgage and Treasury bonds. When bond prices rise on these buying rallies, rates drop.

 

But it’s not actual mortgage rates that drop when mortgage bond prices rally, it’s mortgage bond yields (the rate of return on those bonds) that drop. Then lenders re-price mortgage rate sheets based on those lower yields. This lowering of mortgage rates didn’t happen to quite the extent that lower mortgage bond yields might suggest because last week was wildly volatile. Mortgage bond prices swung more than 100 basis points Thursday and Friday—in the bond world, this is similar to the massive swings we saw in the Dow Thursday (when it was down 1000 at one point).

 

And when lenders see this kind of volatility, they sometimes hold the line on rate sheet re-pricing. This is what lenders did Thursday and Friday so they can wait to see if the mortgage bond rally can sustain itself or if it washes out. Nevertheless, current low rates still speak for themselves.

EUROPEAN DEBT ISSUES TO DRIVE MARKETS MAY 10-14

Market movement next week will continue to be dominated by the European debt situation. To keep the Greece debt crisis from spreading throughout the 16-country Euro zone, the EU announced today that they will “defend the Euro, whatever it takes” by creating a fund. By Sunday, before Asian markets open, the EU will roll out further details of their plan.

And since government debt issues are front and center, next week’s Treasury auctions will strongly influence the direction of trading—and rate levels. Treasury will auction $78b in new debt as follows: $38b 3yr notes Tuesday, $24b 10yr notes Wednesday, $16b 30yr bonds Thursday. Logic would suggest strong uptake on these auctions since this debt is a better credit risk than other government debt options, but as we saw Thursday and Friday, logic can be fleeting.WHERE TO GET

DAILY CONSUMER-FRIENDLY MARKET UPDATES

In addition to this WeeklyBasis report, you can get daily updates on this fluid situation (written in terms consumers can understand) by visiting www.TheBasisPoint.com. You can follow using Twitter feed at www.twitter.com/thebasispoint and/or you can ‘Like’ www.facebook.com/thebasispoint and headlines will be added to your Facebook stream. Next week is light on economic data with Trade Balance Wednesday, Retail Sales Friday, and Consumer Sentiment Friday being the three biggest reports. We also have 7 public speeches by senior Fed officials throughout the week. Zero-point rates on loans up to $729k held at record lows for the second week last week even though mortgage bond levels might suggest rates would have dropped further. Jumbos also held steady at very attractive levels. Mortgage bonds benefitted as the EU/IMF’s $140b Greece bailout caused investors to sell European debt and buy more conservative U.S. mortgage and Treasury bonds. When bond prices rise on these buying rallies, rates drop.

WeeklyBasis 4/23/10: Rate Lock Bias Next Week, Federal Homebuyer Tax Credit Expires Friday

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Despite a volatile week, rates were net down .125%, bringing conventional conforming rates (on loans up to $417,000) within .1% of all-time record lows. Below is a recap of last week and rationale for a rate lock bias going into next week. And don’t forget that Friday is the last day homebuyers can be in contract to be eligible for the Federal homebuyer tax credit—those in California have a new state credit with different deadlines. More on both tax credits here:

RATE FACTORS WEEK OF 4/19/10

Three factors pushing rates up mid to late last week were: (1) business inflation measured by the Producer Price Index came in at 6% year-over-year through March, and despite the much tamer 0.9% ‘Core’ number which excludes oil and food costs, bond markets saw it as cause for concern, (2) Treasury announced $129b in new bond supply being auctioned next week and supply concerns caused mortgage bonds to sell off, pushing rates up, and (3) New Home Sales surged 27% in March, positive economic news which was also a sell off signal for bond markets.

5 REASONS FOR RATE LOCK BIAS WEEK OF 4/26

(1) The Greece situation is playing out this weekend as the country explores aid options with the IMF, European Central Bank, Russia, Brazil, and China. The latest Bloomberg report says Greece needs about $60b to help cover maturing debt over the next three years. If any aid package is looking likely next week, that may hurt rates as investors move out of mortgage bonds.

(2) The Fed’s third rate policy meeting of 2010 is Tuesday-Wednesday with an announcement to follow. If rate policy announcement says anything even slightly different than their long-standing “inflation is likely to be subdued for some time” statement, rates could rise.

(3) The February 2010 Case Shiller existing home price report comes out Tuesday, and if it’s similar to January’s report showing year-over-year price declines of just -0.7% across 20 major U.S. metro areas, or if it tips over to become positive for the first time since January 2007, rates could rise.

(4) Treasury will auction $129b of new supply during the week as follows: $11b in 5yr TIPS Monday, $44b in 2yr notes Tuesday, $42b in 5yr notes Wednesday, $32b in 7yr notes Thursday. The direction of rates will depend on the reception of these auctions, but excessive supply hurts rates.

(5) Friday will be the first 1Q2010 GDP reading which will tell us whether the positive economic growth of the last two quarters will sustain itself, and to what extent. This estimate calls for +3.3%, and unless it’s significantly disappointing, markets will acknowledge this as a positive sign, and bonds would sell off, pushing rates higher.

Rate volatility will continue next week, and market outlook suggests rates could rise, so borrowers should be ready to lock rates at a moment’s notice. Below are the top 5 reasons for a rate lock bias. The largest factor pushing rates down early and late last week was the ongoing debt crisis in Greece. As bond market investors have grown more skeptical about Greece’s ability to fund their debt obligations, they have sold out of Greece and other European bonds to buy mortgage and Treasury bonds. When mortgage bond prices rise on this buying, rates drop. http://bit.ly/cgZJYE.

WeeklyBasis: Rates Improve. Economics 101: What Is A Minsky Moment?

logo_greenRRates were net down .125% for the week ended April 9 mostly on positive overall Treasury auctions. This regains half of the .25% rise we had as the Fed ended it’s 15-month mortgage rate stimulus program on March 31. Conventional conforming rates are now back within .25% of all-record lows.

INFLATION & FED OUTLOOK DOMINATE WEEK
The WeeklyBasis rate lock bias going into the past three weeks is now shifting to a floating bias going into Monday, with more rate lock caution as the week goes on. Here’s why…

There’s no economic data Monday, and Trade Balance data Tuesday that’s usually not a big rate mover. Wednesday we have Consumer Inflation and Retail Sales data. Inflation should still remain subdued but if it moves up at all, rates would follow. Retail Sales also may not move a lot, but even a bit of up movement will cause rates to rise on perception that the worst is over—and retail sales are the most obvious indicator that consumers are ready to spend again.

Also Wednesday, Fed chairman Ben Bernanke testifies before congressional Joint Economic Committee on the economic outlook. His speech will contain much of the recent ‘subdued inflation for some time’ message, but the Q&A helps pinpoint timing on the Fed’s eventual exit from ultra low rates.

ECONOMICS 101: WHAT IS A MINSKY MOMENT?
From Wednesday to Friday, market mood will be influenced by several speeches from prominent Fed officials, financial leaders, lawmakers, and journalists at the 19th Annual Hyman P. Minsky Conference On The State of the U.S. and World Economies. Speakers will explore where markets and financial reform goes from here.

Minsky (1919-1996) was an American economist who’s best known for his study of financial crises. The New Yorker’s John Cassidy, a speaker at this year’s conference, summed up Minksy’s work like this: “There are basically five stages in Minsky’s model of the credit cycle: displacement, boom, euphoria, profit taking, and panic.”

Minsky’s work has grown in influence as world economies more quickly go from booms (based on incurring massive debt to invest in higher yielding assets) to busts (based on the mass selling of those assets when the debt comes due). A ‘Minsky Moment’ is when the panic selling sets in…buyers are scarce because asset values plummet, and the debt used to finance asset purchases can’t be serviced.

In other words: credit and liquidity both freeze. Just like they did when the crisis began in Fall 2007.

So the topics covered at this week’s conference will be closely watched by market participants.

 

WeeklyBasis: Critical Economic Outlook Week Coming

The Basis Point

 

 

 

 

 

 

Despite volatility last week that caused rates to move up and down about .2%, we ended the week even. Business and consumer inflation reports both showed that inflation is under control. The Fed reiterated this after their FOMC meeting Tuesday, and left overnight bank-to-bank and Fed-to-bank rates at .25% and .75% respectively.

Rates were especially volatile Friday as mortgage bond traders contented with the threat from Moody’s and Fitch that U.S. debt may lose its AAA rating, and the volatility will continue next week. We’ve got 2, 5 and 7 year Treasury auctions, and while these shorter durations don’t directly compete with mortgage bonds, it’s still more bond supply—too much supply can cause mortgage bonds to sell off which pushes rates up.

Friday we also have the third and final revision to 4Q09 GDP, which will be close to the 5.9% reported last month. More important is where the economy is going, and we’ll hear this economic outlook from 10 different senior Fed officials making public speeches throughout next week. It started today with Fed chairman Ben Bernanke telling an independent banking group that “It is unconscionable that the fate of the world economy should be so closely tied to the fortunes of a relatively small number of giant financial firms. If we achieve nothing else in the wake of the crisis, we must ensure that we never again face such a situation.”

Next week’s most significant market moving speeches/testimony as follows: Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner testifies Tuesday before the House Financial Services Committee on the future of housing finance and the Fed’s role in responsible home ownership, Kansas City Fed President Thomas Hoenig, the only FOMC member who has voted to hike rates (at last 2 FOMC meetings), will give a speech Wednesday entitled ‘The Financial Foundation for Main Street’, and Thursday Bernanke will tell Congress how the Fed intends to unwind the stimulus and what the economic implications might be.

WeeklyBasis: Big Week Ahead For Fed & Bernanke, Last Chance For FHA Condo Spot Approvals

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Rate & Market Update

Rates dropped for the second week in a row bringing rates close to all time record lows set April and November 2009. The official report on rates isn’t relevant for consumers because it’s published by Freddie Mac a week late (so this week’s rates will be published January 28), but markets are certainly cooperating with home financers even as the Fed starts to wind down their rate support.

The Fed bought $12b net of mortgage bonds this week which is 52% less than their weekly buys through most of 2009. The reason they’re buying fewer mortgage bonds weekly is that they’re at 92% of their $1.25t mortgage bond buying budget laid out last year to help housing. When the Fed (or any other private investor) bids up mortgage bond prices with buying, bond yields (or rates) drop. This program is set to expire March 31 and the Fed has just under $100b left in it’s budget, so this means $10-12b per week in purchases is all markets can expect.

The most likely two things that will happen as the Fed winds down are: rates will rise sharply because no private investors step in to buy new mortgage supply, or the Fed’s program will have it’s intended effect and the private MBS market will gain confidence. But even in scenario two, it’s reasonable to expect that rates will come up from these levels during 2010.

Economic Preview For Next Week

We’ll get another signal on the Fed’s thinking next week when they announce their rate decisions Wednesday following their two-day Federal Open Market Committee meeting. The Senate is also expected to vote next week on whether to confirm Fed chairman Ben Bernanke for a second term—his first term expires January 31.

The election-year debate is furious and Bernanke’s confirmation is in question. It would be unfortunate if short-term election cycle strategy sways Senators to vote out Bernanke while he’s right in the middle of long-term market cycle strategy. Senators and consumers are angry at heat-of-crisis policies but the economic fallout of not doing what the Fed has done would be much worse than existing 10% unemployment.

On top of high Fed drama, we have S&P Case Shiller existing home price data Tuesday, new home sales Wednesday, the first of three 4Q2009 GDP readings Friday, and dozens of quarterly corporate earnings reports.

Amidst all the economic news, one story has gotten lost, which is that Friday, January 29 is the last day for any FHA condo borrower to start a new FHA loan before the February 1 change that requires HUD to approve an entire condo building in order for any unit in that building to be eligible for an FHA loan. For any condo FHA loans registered by Friday, they will still be eligible for a unit-specific approval even if HUD hasn’t approved the building

CONFORMING RATES ($200,000 – $417,000) – 1 POINT

30 Year: 4.75%   (4.87% APR)

FHA 30 Year: 5.0% (5.13% APR)

5/1 ARM: 3.5% (3.63% APR)

SUPER-CONFORMING RATES ($417,001 to $729,750 cap by county) – 1 POINT

30 Year: 5.0% (5.13% APR)

FHA 30 Year: 5.0% (5.18% APR)

5/1 ARM: 4.5% (4.64% APR)

JUMBO RATES ($625,500 – $3,500,000) – 1 POINT

30 Year: 5.875% to 6.25%   (6.02% to 6.37% APR)

5/1 ARM: 5.25%   (5.43% APR)

Scenarios assume full doc pricing on purchase or rate/term refi (but not cash-out refi) loans for borrower with 720 FICO score or greater, at least 20% equity (unless FHA), and 6-12 months reserves left over after close (retirement assets counted at 70% of value for reserves). Better or worse rates apply to specific client profiles. Better rates are available using tax deductible points. ARM rates adjust the first month after initial fixed period shown, and once per year thereafter until year 30. Adjusted rate calculated by adding 2.25% margin to 1yr LIBOR index at time of adjustment. At first adjustment LIBOR+margin cannot exceed start rate+5%, subsequent yearly adjustments can never be greater than 2% per year, total of all adjustments for 30yr life of loan can never exceed start rate+5%. This is not a loan commitment nor a loan guarantee, rates based on loan amount ranges shown and rates available at the time of production. Rates subject to change without notice. California Department of Real Estate license #01376428. Equal Housing Lender.

WeeklyBasis: Interest Rate Outlook for 2010

Julian_Hebron

Since sending the WeeklyBasis 2010 Rate Outlook this Monday (as opposed to normal Friday delivery), rates are still holding. See below for current levels as of the end of mortgage bond trading today.

Now onto the critical alert for the week: Homebuyers intending to use FHA loans to finance condo purchases should be advised that FHA condo “Spot Approvals” are going away February 1. A Spot Approval is when a lender can approve and fund a loan on a specific unit in any condo building provided the building meets certain conditions (building is 4 units or greater, 90% of units sold, 51% owner-occupied, no more than 20% commercial space, healthy condo budget, etc.).

An FHA Spot Approval is key for buyers because it means the buyer has lots of inventory to choose from. As of February 1, HUD is eliminating Spot Approvals, meaning an entire building must be approved by HUD directly or by a lender directly. Because of fraud liability and risk issues, most lenders are not approving whole buildings and deferring to the HUD-direct approval method.

This means significantly less condo inventory to choose from, at least for the next 3-6 months as more condo projects get FHA approval from HUD—a 4-8 week approval process that’s likely to get longer after February 1. For example, in all of San Francisco, there are only 27 FHA-approved condo projects currently approved.

If a homebuyer looking to buy a condo with FHA financing in the first quarter and wants to have the largest possible inventory to choose from, they should consider this HUD deadline. If they want to do a Spot Approval on a non-FHA approved building, they need to be in contract by Friday, January 29.

For post February 1 inventory evaluation purposes, use the following instructions to see which entire condo buildings are currently FHA approved by HUD:

- Go to https://entp.hud.gov/idapp/html/condlook.cfm

- For ‘Approval Method’ select ‘Pre HRAP/DELRAP’

- For City, enter city name, e.g.: ‘San Francisco’

- Leave all other fields blank

- Select ‘Send’

If there are any questions about how a condo building can obtain a HUD-direct approval, or homebuyer scenarios to discuss, please let me know.

CONFORMING RATES ($200,000 – $417,000) – 1 POINT

30 Year: 5.0%   (5.12% APR)

FHA 30 Year: 5% (5.13% APR)

5/1 ARM: 3.875% (3.99% APR)

SUPER-CONFORMING RATES ($417,001 to $729,750 cap by county) – 1 POINT

30 Year: 5.25% (5.36% APR)

FHA 30 Year: 5.25% (5.38% APR)

5/1 ARM: 5.25% (5.37% APR)

JUMBO RATES ($625,500 – $3,500,000) – 1 POINT

30 Year: 5.875% to 6.25%   (6.02% to 6.37% APR)

5/1 ARM: 5.25%   (5.43% APR)

WeeklyBasis 1/4/09: 2010 Mortgage Rate & Economic Outlook

Julian_Hebron

WeeklyBasis is normally published Fridays, but this Monday report is an exception so I can do an outlook on this first business day of  2010. To summarize, my outlook is for waning Fed support to push rates to about 1% higher, and choppy economic recovery marked by modest GDP growth and minimal employment improvement. Rationale for these positions is below.

Please note that conforming rates are assumed when discussing rates because these are the broadest proxies for how all rate tiers behave. Current conforming, super conforming and jumbo rates are also included at the bottom along with loan amounts designated by each of these categories.

RATES START 2010 EXACTLY LIKE 2009

If we go back to the first business day of 2009, conforming 30-year fixed rates were 5%, the exact same as they are today, and all-time record rate lows were achieved twice during 2009: in April and again in late-November. Those record low rates were 4.78%, which is .22% lower than today.

For the real story on rate fluctuations, we have to back up prior to 2009. In November 2008, the Fed’s overnight bank-to-bank Fed Funds Rate was 1% versus 5.25% when the credit crisis began the first week of August 2007. By comparison, conforming 30-year fixed rates were 6.125% on November 17, 2008 and 6.625% on August 6, 2007. So the Fed cut overnight rates by 4.5% in the heat of the credit crunch, and 30-year rates only dropped 0.5%.

WHY RATES DROPPED IN 2009

For those who may think mortgage rates are directly tied to Fed rates, the stats above prove that isn’t true. More definitive proof comes from what the Fed did next. Knowing that mortgage rates are directly tied to mortgage bonds, they announced on November 24, 2008 that they’d buy $500b in mortgage bonds from January through December 2009.

The Fed knew that pushing up mortgage bond prices with buying would push mortgage bond yields—or rates—down. And since cutting overnight rates didn’t have much impact on long rates in the heat of the crisis, they embarked on this unprecedented program.

Their plan worked and 30-year conforming rates dropped from 6.125% to 5% in six weeks. The Fed expanded their program twice during 2009: on March 18 they increased the mortgage bond buying budget to $1.25t, and on September 23 they extended the buying timeline until March 31, 2010.

WHY RATES WILL RISE IN 2010

A critical element of the 2010 rate outlook is the 1.25% rate drop that occurred from November 24, 2008 to January 1, 2009. This drop to rates we still have today happened before the Fed spent one penny buying mortgage bonds.

The massive mortgage bond rally that pushed rates down to today’s levels came from large institutional investors around the globe who knew the Fed’s commitment to the mortgage bond market was a great opportunity.

The money manager strategy was simple: buy before the Fed bids up mortgage bond prices, and sell at a profit before the Fed starts selling.

This is no secret. Most major money managers have publicly remarked about this. Bill Gross who heads PIMCO, the world’s largest bond manager, was clear and explicit about recommending this “buy-before-Fed, sell-before-Fed” strategy in his January 19, 2009 Investment Outlook. 

WHERE RATES WILL GO IN 2010?

So today the Fed is $1.11t or 89.14% into their mortgage bond budget with a little less than 13 weeks left in their buying program. This cuts their average weekly buying power to about $10.5b, and the average since they extended the timeline has been about $16b per week.

So the Fed’s ability drive down rates with mortgage bond purchases will decrease and private selling pressure will increase. This equation generally favors sellers of mortgage bonds which would push rates higher. However, some balance comes from a decrease mortgage bond supply to absorb as refinancing activity slows.

Inflation is another key issue in 2010 since bonds will sell off (pushing rates higher) if inflation becomes a threat. Inflation drives up long rates in two ways:

First, inflation erodes the return of a fixed yield such as a mortgage bond yield, so investors tend to sell when they see higher inflation. And remember when bond prices drop in a selloff, rates rise.

Second, with overnight rates at record lows, global investors can borrow short term funds very cheaply and reinvest into long bonds like mortgage bonds. This carry trade gets wiped out if inflation becomes an issue because the Fed hikes short rates which forces selling of long-term securities like mortgage bonds to repay the short term loans.

The end result of all these factors leads me to my outlook for +1% on 30-year fixed rates by September 2010.

ECONOMIC OUTLOOK

Not including the December 2009 jobs numbers that come out Friday, the economy lost 4.08m jobs in 2009 and unemployment rate went from 7.6% to 10% in 2009.  Economic growth as measured by GDP was +2.2% for 3Q2009 (latest data available) following four straight quarters of contraction.

There’s lots of chatter about the end of the recession, but the jobs situation continues to be largely overlooked when factoring economic improvement. The NBER officially called a recession early-December 2008 and said at the time that it had been in effect for a year.

So it’s easy to call the end of the recession based on expectations that 4Q2009 could be a second consecutive positive GDP period, but it’s more complicated with 10% unemployment. The November report showed just 11,000 jobs lost, which is a huge improvement from the 370k average monthly loss for the year. But our labor force grows at about 125,000 workers per month due to population growth, so we’d need to add that just to stay even.  

So any economic recovery defined purely by GDP looks to be limited due to the jobless pressure.

I’ll track these and all other topics weekly, as I have been since 2003. Happy new year to all.

CONFORMING RATES ($200,000 – $417,000) – 1 POINT

30 Year: 5.0%   (5.12% APR)

FHA 30 Year: 5% (5.13% APR)

5/1 ARM: 3.875% (3.99% APR)

SUPER-CONFORMING RATES ($417,001 to $729,750 cap by county) – 1 POINT

30 Year: 5.25% (5.36% APR)

FHA 30 Year: 5.25% (5.38% APR)

5/1 ARM: 5.25% (5.37% APR)

JUMBO RATES ($625,500 – $3,500,000) – 1 POINT

30 Year: 5.875% to 6.25%   (6.02% to 6.37% APR)

5/1 ARM: 5.25%   (5.43% APR)

Scenarios assume full doc pricing on purchase or rate/term refi (but not cash-out refi) loans for borrower with 720 FICO score or greater, at least 20% equity (unless FHA), and 6-12 months reserves left over after close (retirement assets counted at 70% of value for reserves). Better or worse rates apply to specific client profiles. Better rates are available using tax deductible points. ARM rates adjust the first month after initial fixed period shown, and once per year thereafter until year 30. Adjusted rate calculated by adding 2.25% margin to 1yr LIBOR index at time of adjustment. At first adjustment LIBOR+margin cannot exceed start rate+5%, subsequent yearly adjustments can never be greater than 2% per year, total of all adjustments for 30yr life of loan can never exceed start rate+5%. This is not a loan commitment nor a loan guarantee, rates based on loan amount ranges shown and rates available at the time of production. Rates subject to change without notice. California Department of Real Estate license #01376428. Equal Housing Lender.

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Highest 30 yr Mortgage Rates Hit in Oct 1981…They were 18.45%!!!

After touching the lowest levels on record before Thanksgiving, rates are now about .1% higher than that. The attached chart shows rates from December 2009 back to April 1971, when Freddie Mac started officially tracking 30 year mortgage rates. The high was in October 1981, when borrowers paid an average of 2.3% points to buy a rate down to 18.45%. The low was November 25, 2009, when borrowers averaged 0.7% points to buy a rate down to 4.78%—note that 4.78% with 0.7% points was also achieved April 2 and April 30, 2009. These are rates on conforming loans up to $417,000 for single family homes with 20% or more equity in the property.

Mortgage interest rates have been, and continue to be, some of the lowest interest rates in recorded history…Contact Julian or I, to discuss why now could be the best time for you to buy.

Visit us on the web at: Katy or JulianRates1971to2009_jdh

Fed May Reverse Rate Stimulus Faster Than Expected

12/18/2009

RATE/MARKET UPDATE

Rates initially rose this week on a stronger-than-expected business inflation report Tuesday, but recovered after the Fed reiterated that they expect weak economic conditions to help keep rates lower for the near term. Rates end this week about the same as last week.

But it should be noted that Bernanke’s Fed is highly market oriented. Their post-meeting statements, like the one they issued Wednesday after their final 2009 policy meeting, don’t indicate this explicitly but the minutes of those meetings do. The minutes are very specific about how market oriented they are, and recent minutes describe how the Fed will look to raise rates by selling mortgage bonds and/or hiking overnight rates when they see more sustained economic improvement and/or inflationary pressure. Their first of eight 2010 meetings is January 26-27. 

ECONOMIC PREVIEW NEXT WEEK

Some of this data will come next week with the final 3Q2009 GDP reading on Tuesday, which should confirm that the economy grew about 2.8%, the first growth (as opposed to contraction) number in five quarters. Personal Income/Spending and a key consumer inflation reading Wednesday: Personal Consumption Expenditures is the Fed’s favorite measure of inflation, so mortgage bond markets will sell off if it’s higher than expected. When bond prices drop in a selloff, rates rise. We also have existing and new home sales reports Tuesday and Wednesday.

CONFORMING RATES ($200,000 – $417,000) – 1 POINT

30 Year: 4.875%   (5.02% APR)

FHA 30 Year: 4.875% (5.08% APR)

5/1 ARM: 4.0% (4.13% APR)

SUPER-CONFORMING RATES ($417,001 to $729,750 cap by county) – 1 POINT

30 Year: 5.125% (5.26% APR)

FHA 30 Year: 5.125% (5.25% APR)

5/1 ARM: 4.5% (4.63% APR)

JUMBO RATES ($625,500 – $3,500,000) – 1 POINT

30 Year: 5.625% to 5.875%   (5.78% to 6.02% APR)

10/1 ARM: 6.25%   (6.39% APR)

5/1 ARM: 5.25%   (5.43% APR)

Scenarios assume full doc pricing on purchase or rate/term refi (but not cash-out refi) loans for borrower with 720 FICO score or greater, at least 20% equity (unless FHA), and 6-12 months reserves left over after close (retirement assets counted at 70% of value for reserves). Better or worse rates apply to specific client profiles. Better rates are available using tax deductible points. ARM rates adjust the first month after initial fixed period shown, and once per year thereafter until year 30. Adjusted rate calculated by adding 2.25% margin to 1yr LIBOR index at time of adjustment. At first adjustment LIBOR+margin cannot exceed start rate+5%, subsequent yearly adjustments can never be greater than 2% per year, total of all adjustments for 30yr life of loan can never exceed start rate+5%. This is not a loan commitment nor a loan guarantee, rates based on loan amount ranges shown and rates available at the time of production. Rates subject to change without notice. California Department of Real Estate license #01376428. Equal Housing Lender.