Mortgage Rates Holding Steady
The 30-year fixed rate rests at 5.41% as President Obama unveils foreclosure prevention program.
o Current Mortgage Rates
o 30 yr fixed mortgage5.17%
o 15 yr fixed mortgage4.78%
o 30 yr fixed jumbo mortgage6.92%
o 5/1 ARM 4.80%
o 5/1 jumbo ARM 5.33%
Mortgage rates remained flat last week, as President Obama unveiled a $75 billion plan to help prevent foreclosures. The average 30-year fixed mortgage stayed constant at 5.41% for the week ended March 4, according to Bankrate.com.
The average jumbo 30-year fixed rate reached the lowest level in nearly two years, slipping to 6.77% from 6.87%. The average 15-year fixed rate mortgage ticked up to 4.94% from 4.93%.
Adjustable rate home loans fell, with the 1-year ARM pulling back to 5.43 from 5.58%; the 5/1 adjustable-rate mortgage decreasing to 5.39% from 5.40%.
Mortgage rates are continuing their sideways movement, though they may tilt higher as long-term concern grows regarding how the government will manage its growing budget deficit, according to Weiss Research analyst Mike Larson. “Mortgage interest rates are moving sideways with an upward bias. There are some concerns for how we’ll pay for the stimulus and everything else. And despite the dismal economic news the market is getting, there’s some concern about supply overshadowing that, and that’s impacting bond prices,” Larson said.
President Obama’s $75 billion foreclosure prevention program went into effect Wednesday. The Homeowner Affordability and Stability Plan will help more homeowners refinance into new, low-interest rates and it provides incentives to mortgage lenders and servicing companies to restructure mortgage balances and renegotiate mortgage rates.
1 comment
RSS feed for comments on this post.
Leave a comment
Read more
« Borrowers Reject Adjustable Rate Mortgage Loans
Mortgage Interest Rates Drop »
In the past, homeowners with bad credit have relied on subprime mortgage, hard money loans and FHA to help them refinance. Unfortunately with the foreclosure crisis and the continued credit crunch lender have not expanded their refinance programs to help borrowers with less than perfect credit.