Mortgage rates
Its Primary Mortgage Market Survey found the average for the 30-year fixed rate loan increased 16 basis points to 7.79% for the week of Oct. 26, up from 7.63% seven days prior and
Yesterday, the Mortgage Bankers Association's
Furthermore, the 15-year fixed crossed above the 7% barrier for the first time
"Rates have risen two full percentage points in 2023 alone and, as we head into Halloween, the impacts may scare potential homebuyers," said Freddie Mac Chief Economist Sam Khater in a press release. "Purchase activity has slowed to a virtual standstill, affordability remains a significant hurdle for many and the only way to address it is lower rates and greater inventory."
During the past seven days, the 10-year Treasury yield
While on Oct. 19, the 10-year closed just shy of 4.99%, by Monday it was back down to 4.84%.
"Upside inflation risk, rising government borrowing and
Zillow's rate tracker as of Thursday morning for the 30-year FRM found it at 7.78%, versus the prior week's average of 7.67%.
In the third quarter, GDP grew by 4.9% on an annual basis, according to a preliminary estimate from the Bureau of Economic Analysis. This compared with 2.1% in the second quarter.
BEA attributed the increase in part to gains in consumer spending, a category that among other things includes housing.
"As excess savings built up during the pandemic continue to drop and wage gains decelerate, it is difficult to see how this pace of consumer spending growth can be maintained," Mike Fratantoni, chief economist at the Mortgage Bankers Association, said in a statement. "We are now seeing some consumer stress in the rising delinquency rates for credit cards and auto loans."
So far mortgages are not affected by that rise in consumer defaults. The total delinquency rate, loans 30 days or more past due, including those in foreclosure, was 2.6% in August, a historic low, said CoreLogic. That is a 0.1 percentage point decline from July and a 0.2 percentage point drop from one year ago.
"U.S. mortgage performance remained strong in August, supported by a robust job market and a healthy economy," said Molly Boesel, principal economist at CoreLogic, in a press release. "However, this thriving job market comes at a time when interest rates are quickly rising, which is keeping many potential homebuyers from being able to secure a mortgage."
This quarter's GDP results indicate consumers are still happy to spend in spite of rising interest rates, said Nigel Green, CEO of DeVere Group, a financial advisory firm.
Yet, enough negative signals remain for an economic downturn that investors and others need to be concerned about.
"The bond market is sending red-flag signals that it believes a recession is looming," Green said. "For more than a year now, we've seen an inverted yield curve," and every time this has happened since the 1960s,
"It's happened for the last eight recessions — and it's never been wrong," Green continued.