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Mortgage-rate party may have reached the end
By Michael
D. Larson Bankrate.com
You know how there are certain seminal moments
in time? Those days when empires fall? When great turning points
in history occur? When people stop dancing to disco and start crushing
their Bee Gees records in the middle of baseball stadiums?
For mortgage hunters, that day may have come
March 27. Bond yields skyrocketed and mortgage rates followed because
the single most important economic indicator of late -- consumer
confidence -- rebounded sharply this month. It's too early to say
whether rates have hit an absolute bottom for this latest interest
rate cycle. But now more than ever, borrowers have to consider whether
they could live with themselves if they missed really good rates
waiting for great rates that never came.
Why are the latest figures so important? During
a February
speech, Federal Reserve Board Chairman Alan Greenspan said the
level of consumer confidence over the next few months could determine
whether the economy continues to get worse or bottoms out quickly
and then improves.
If consumers remain confident in their financial
future and keep spending, factories will ramp up production again,
layoffs will trail off and the second half of the year will look
much better than the first. If they start hunkering down, the current
downturn could turn into a recession. Because the big man in Washington
said publicly that he cares so much about confidence, Wall Street
traders have watched each report that measures it like a hawk.
They receive two major studies each month, one
from the University of Michigan and one from the New York-based
research group, The Conference Board. The Michigan study registered
only a slight uptick in consumer sentiment -- to 91.8 in March from
90.6 a month earlier, according to Briefing.com. But the Conference
Board's Consumer Confidence Index shot up to 117 from 109.2. That
dramatic and unexpected hike, while good news for the economy, pummeled
the bond market and sent interest rates soaring.
Is there a chance this is much ado about nothing?
Maybe. If layoffs keep mounting and stocks continue to dive from
already depressed levels, confidence could fall again. But if the
stock market's late-March mayhem didn't damage confidence levels,
nor keep people from buying big-ticket items such as houses, who's
to say further declines will have a big, long-term impact?
Consider also that the main thing keeping mortgage
rates low lately is the stock market's problems. Nobody -- not me,
not you, not Alan Greenspan -- knows whether the market is going
to rise or fall on any given day or week. Without data showing the
economy getting worse (rather than just bouncing around at a low
level the way the latest numbers show), you're essentially gambling
when you wait to lock in a low rate that you'll get a big down day
in the market.
If that happens, great. You might shave one-eighth
of a percentage point off your mortgage rate. But is it really worth
all the stress involved in watching every 5-point rise or fall in
the Dow Jones Industrial Average, or the risk that one down-100
day will be followed by three up-200 ones?
The point here is this: there's no telling for
sure if the almost one-year downward trend in mortgage rates has
come to end. But the odds of that being the case increased substantially
with the improved confidence figures. Rates should hold steady until
more solid evidence of an economic recovery emerges, but when the
market sees that, rates will start rising again. Do you want to
be one of the people left behind?
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