With mortgage rates ticking up as investors anticipate the Federal Reserve raising interest rates in December, the expense of borrowing is increasing, and that’s leading some new home buyers to speed up their purchases while discouraging homeowners from refinancing existing mortgages.
Mortgage rate hikes assist and impair home buyers
While mortgage applications for home purchases were essentially flat throughout the week ended Nov. 25 from the week earlier, refinancing dropped 16%. That meant overall applications fell 9.4 %, as outlined by Mortgage Bankers Association figures released Wednesday and adjusted to accommodate for the Thanksgiving holiday.
MBA chief economist Mike Fratantoni projected mortgage origination’s would fall in 2017 due to a sharp drop in refinancing. But he said in an email that new-purchase mortgages would increase about 10 % in 2017 “based on the strengthening economy, employment and housing demand. The housing market will continue to do well so long as the job market remains strong, and we anticipate a further drop in the unemployment rate in 2017.”
Average interest rates for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages hit levels not seen since July 2015, reported by MBA. Rates for mortgages with balances of $417,000 or less were 4.23%, while rates for mortgages with balances of more than $417,000 were 4.18%.
“With mortgage rates going up, affordability is down,” said David Berson, former chief economist of Fannie Mae and current chief economist at Nationwide Insurance, in an interview. But “affordability is still at a fairly high level.”
Dave Liniger, CEO of brokerage franchisor RE/MAX, agreed higher rates shouldn’t harm the housing market “at all. In fact,” he stated in an email, “a rising interest- and mortgage-rate environment could actually cause an uptick in demand, with savvy buyers wanting to get into homes and lock in their rates more quickly.”
There are some indications home buyers might be choosing a breather as rate increases accelerate. New-home searches on real estate site Zillow.com have “essentially been flat for the last month,” Zillow senior economist Aaron Terrazas said in an interview. Still, Terrazas said big life decisions and local housing inventory are bigger factors than interest rates for home buyers.
Mortgages issued to purchase homes, rather than refinancing existing mortgages, continue to be humming along at an encouraging clip. Some “fence sitters” are buying now to avoid higher rates later, Berson said. What’s more, the strong real estate market and wage increases are encouraging many buyers to take the plunge.
Still, higher prices are crowding out some home buyers. The S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller Indices reported Tuesday that home prices hit an all-time high in September, rising 5.5 % from a year earlier and 0.4 % from August. Prices averaged $184,800 in September, surpassing July 2006’s peak of $184,620.
We have a team of agents ready to assist you in finding your new home here in the Tampa Bay Area. Give us a call at 813-300-7116, or simply click here and let us know what you are looking for in your new home and let us get started working for you.