Published March 01, 2012 Associated Press
WASHINGTON – The average
rate on the 30-year mortgage edged down this week to hover again above record lows.
Cheaper rates have spurred modest improvements in the battered housing
market, but not enough to signal a recovery.
Mortgage buyer Freddie Mac said Thursday that the
rate on the 30-year home loan fell to 3.90 percent from 3.95 percent the
previous week. That's slightly above the 3.87 percent average rate hit two weeks
ago, which was the lowest since long-term mortgages began in the
1950s.
The average on the 15-year fixed mortgage fell to
3.17 percent from 3.19 percent a week ago. It hit a record 3.14 percent four
weeks ago.
Mortgage rates have been below 4 percent for more
than three months. That has made home-buying and refinancing more attractive for
those who can qualify.
Home sales have improved and the four-week average of
home purchase applications was up a smidge last week, according to the Mortgage
Bankers Association. Refinancing now makes nearly 78 percent of mortgage
activity.
But government programs have been propping up the
relatively low level of mortgage applications. The Obama administration's
revamped refinancing program, the Home Affordable Refinance Program, or HARP,
now accounts for more than 20 percent of refinancing nationwide.
Elsewhere, the housing market is displaying signs of
health ahead of the traditionally busy spring-buying season.
Builders are more optimistic and construction has
picked up. The supply of homes fell last month to its lowest point in nearly
seven years, which could send home prices higher.
Nationwide, home prices have fallen by 33 percent
since hitting their peak in late 2006. Single-family homes are considered
"undervalued assets" when looking at both rents and incomes, according to
Capital Economics.
The job market is also improving, which is critical
to a housing rebound. In January, employers added 243,000 net jobs — the most in
nine months — and the unemployment rate fell to 8.3 percent, the lowest level in
nearly three years.
But there are major obstacles in the way before
people start buying homes again.
Foreclosures and short sales — when a lender agrees
to sell a home for less than what is owed on a mortgage — are still piling up
and driving down home prices, which fell for a fourth straight month in
December, according to the Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller home-price index.
The weaker economy has persuaded more young Americans
to rent instead of buy. That has spawned a rise in apartment construction and a
drop in the nation's homeownership rate.
Frank Nothaft, Freddie Mac's chief economist, said
the low rates are helping lift the housing market. Still, home sales remain weak
and it could take years for the market to fully return to health.
To calculate the average rates, Freddie Mac surveys
lenders across the country Monday through Wednesday of each week.
The average rates don't include extra fees, known as
points, which most borrowers must pay to get the lowest rates. One point equals
1 percent of the loan amount.
The average fees for the 30-year and 15-year loans
were unchanged at 0.8.
For the five-year adjustable loan, the average rate
rose to 2.83 percent from 2.80 percent, and the average fee was unchanged at
0.7.
The average on the one-year adjustable loan ticked
down to 2.72 percent from 2.73 percent, and the average fee was unchanged at
0.6.
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