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   Message 26,430 of 27,547   
   Leroy N. Soetoro to All   
   'Unhealthy and unsustainable': Homebuyer   
   22 Oct 22 23:47:19   
   
   XPost: misc.invest.real-estate, alt.politics.economics, sac.politics   
   XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, talk.politics.guns, alt.politics.trump   
   From: democrat-criminals@mail.house.gov   
      
   https://finance.yahoo.com/news/unhealthy-unsustainable-homebuyers-aren-t-   
   120000234.html   
      
   U.S. mortgage rates crept up once again this week as demand for home loans   
   tumbled, according to a pair of widely followed reports.   
      
   Buyers and sellers are increasingly on edge as the average 30-year fixed   
   mortgage rate — now more than double what it was at the beginning of the   
   year — inches closer to 7%.   
      
   Homebuilders, too, are losing confidence in the housing market amid rising   
   rates, which one industry leader calls “unhealthy and unsustainable.”   
      
   “High mortgage rates approaching 7% have significantly weakened demand,   
   particularly for first-time and first-generation prospective homebuyers,”   
   Jerry Konter, chairman of the National Association of Home Builders, said   
   this week.   
      
   “Policymakers must address this worsening housing affordability crisis.”   
      
   30-year fixed-rate mortgages   
   The average rate on a 30-year fixed mortgage hit 6.94% this week, up from   
   6.92% a week earlier, mortgage finance giant Freddie Mac reported on   
   Thursday. A year ago at this time, the 30-year rate averaged 3.09%.   
      
   While the latest rate increase was more moderate than in previous weeks,   
   borrowing costs are still at a 20-year high and getting worse.   
      
   “The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage continues to remain just shy of 7% and is   
   adversely impacting the housing market in the form of declining demand,”   
   says Sam Khater, Freddie Mac’s chief economist.   
      
   “Additionally, homebuilder confidence has dropped to half what it was just   
   six months ago and construction, particularly single-family residential   
   construction, continues to slow down.”   
      
   15-year fixed-rate mortgages   
   The rate on a 15-year fixed mortgage is averaging 6.23%, up from 6.09%   
   last week, Freddie Mac says. A year ago at this time, the 15-year rate was   
   averaging 2.33%.   
      
   Since then, buyers have lost significant buying power — and many have had   
   to adjust their budgets or put their searches on hold.   
      
   Faced with fewer buyers, sellers are no longer able to call all the shots.   
      
   “Among recently sold properties that were on the market for more than a   
   month, sellers had to drop prices by 12% on average,” says Nadia   
   Evangelou, senior economist for the National Association of Realtors.   
      
   Read more: Did you buy a house before 2022? If the answer is 'no,' you   
   will likely be on the wrong end of financial inequality over the next   
   decade — here's why   
      
   5-year adjustable-rate mortgage   
   The increasingly popular five-year adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM) averaged   
   5.71% this week, down from 5.81% a week earlier.   
      
   A year ago at this time, these adjustable mortgages averaged 2.54%.   
      
   This week’s rate dip is likely to fuel even more demand for the five-year   
   ARM, which comes with a fixed rate for the first five years and then   
   adjusts up or down based on a benchmark like the prime rate.   
      
   Buyers have been scooping up adjustable-rate mortgages at a rate not seen   
   since the Great Recession, betting they’ll have an opportunity to   
   refinance into a lower, fixed-rate mortgage before their ARM adjusts.   
      
   Mortgage rates could be at a ‘new normal’   
   Rates have been steadily increasing this year amid actions by the Federal   
   Reserve to tamp down decades-high inflation — despite the pain it’s   
   causing consumers.   
      
   Today’s rates could be considered “the new normal,” says Evangelou.   
      
   She points out that 7% rates were typical in the mid-to-late 1990s and   
   early 2000s. Yet homeownership then was higher than it is now.   
      
   “Today’s potential buyers also have to deal with higher inflation,”   
   Evangelou says. “While inflation outpaces wage growth, the typical family   
   needs to stretch out its budget and spend more than 25% of its income on   
   its mortgage payment.   
      
   “Including other expenses such as mortgage insurance, home insurance,   
   taxes and expenses for property maintenance, home buying costs exceed 30%   
   of a typical family’s income.”   
      
   Mortgage applications this week   
   Mortgage applications fell 4.5% week over week, according to the latest   
   report from the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA).   
      
   “The speed and level to which rates have climbed this year have greatly   
   reduced refinance activity and exacerbated existing affordability   
   challenges in the purchase market,” says Joel Kan, the MBA’s vice   
   president and deputy chief economist.   
      
   “Residential housing activity ranging from housing starts to home sales   
   have been on downward trends coinciding with the rise in rates.”   
      
   Applications to refinance existing loans fell 7% from a week earlier and   
   were 86% lower than last year. The refi share of mortgage activity fell to   
   28.3%, down from 29% the previous week.   
      
   Mortgage applications to purchase homes were down 4% this week — and were   
   38% lower than the same week a year ago.   
      
   “With rates at these high levels, the ARM share rose to 12.8% of all   
   applications, which was the highest share since March 2008,” Kan says.   
      
   “ARM loans continue to remain a viable option for borrowers who are still   
   trying to find ways to reduce their monthly payments.”   
      
   What to read next   
   Should I wait for the housing market to plummet before buying a house? 3   
   reasons why this housing downturn is nothing like 2008   
      
   'It was tough, scary times': Baby-boomer financial experts who lived   
   through the Great Inflation recount ways to ride out a recession   
      
   Here's how much the average American 60-year-old holds in retirement   
   savings — how does your nest egg compare?   
      
   This article provides information only and should not be construed as   
   advice. It is provided without warranty of any kind.   
      
      
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