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Rates are Dropping!!

By
Real Estate Agent with Homes and Food, Inc.

Have you heard?  I have verified with 2 different loan officers that I work with that rates went as low as 5.375 two days ago and are expecting to hold steady in the mid 5's.  The recovery of the housing market is the key to economic growth and it appears that the Feds are making the move.  Check out the article below from NAR's Chief Economist. 

Jeff Nelson
Homes and Food, Inc.

Tons of information about where we live and what we eat in Hampton Roads, Va.
Also, find out real estate information for Chesapeake,
Norfolk, Portsmouth, Suffolk, Hampton, and Newport News.


NAR Says Fed's Buying of Fannie, Freddie Debt Will Drive Down Interest Rates and Help to Stabilize Housing

WASHINGTON, November 25, 2008

Great news for home buyers, home sellers and the U.S. economy is how the National Association of Realtors® greeted this morning's announcement by the Federal Reserve that it will purchase housing-related debts of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, thus freeing up mortgage money on Main Street.

"This is one of the key actions we've been advocating ever since the Treasury altered its course on how it would use the $700 billion recovery package passed in September. This is great news for home buyers and sellers and we applaud the Fed for taking this historic step," said NAR President Charles McMillan, a broker with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage in Dallas-Fort Worth. "Housing recovery is the key to economic recovery in this country and it always has been."

In a four-point plan submitted to Congress last month, NAR called for the Treasury Department to purchase mortgage-backed securities (MBS) from banks to provide price stabilization for housing. Today the Fed said it would purchase mortgage-backed securities from Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and Ginnie Mae for up to $500 billion. "This will be critical to a housing recovery," McMillan said.

Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, said purchasing debt obligations of Fannie and Freddie is an important move. "We commend the Fed decision because it will directly bring down long-term interest rates," he said. "The level of investment should be aggressive enough to bring interest rates down in a meaningful manner. As we've seen in past recessions, home sales rise when mortgage interest rates fall."

Yun said that given the present state of the mortgage market, interest rates on 30-year fixed-rate mortgages are too high. "If Fed action brings down mortgage interest rates by even 1 percentage point, it would increase homes sales by 500,000 units. That should help to draw inventory down and stabilize prices."

Yun said higher home sales are critical now to absorb inventory and stabilize prices. "Only with stabilization in home prices can we have a healthy housing and economic recovery," he said.

In its announcement, the Fed said it will purchase up to $100 billion of GSE debt from primary dealers through a series of competitive auctions to begin next week. Purchases of up to $500 billion in MBS will be conducted by selected asset managers before year-end. Both the direct obligations and MBS purchases are expected to take place over several quarters.

Anonymous
But worth it?

See Pilotonline.com 's front page today on the rise in HR's foreclosure's....Please stop the pitch....none of us are stupid enough to believe anything has leveled off....we're no retarted!! There will be massive foreclosures in HR for the foreseeable future. The 07  $280K home will soon be 120K

Remember....some commission is far greater than 0 comission...Wake up friend.

 

 

Jan 17, 2009 01:12 PM
#1
Anonymous
Fletcher Pratt

I hear ya...People are far more educated and have far more resources than 5 years ago. I also feel insulted when an agent or Mortgage Lender tries to convience me things are different than they really are. I have little respect for them when they start all that talk. Seems they really "Get Off" on getting over on someone more than making a sale. I changed agents like 4 times until I accepted the fact most do the same thing...I just ignore their opinions....there's far too much info out there. It's not helping anyone in the process when they start all that.

The Pilot ran another great article on foreclosures this week. There seems to be no end in sight. My Sisters boyfriend just bought one ...it was listed at 210K and he got it for 156.5K ...it needed about 8K's worth of repair but it is a pretty nice place. We figured it would devalue another 20-30% this year due to the over priced market and bad economy combination...but sometimes you just have to take a small hit...they might go back up in 3-4 years...maybe 2 or 3% each year after that. Who knows?

Jan 21, 2009 12:18 PM
#2