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No need to obsess about mortgage rates
By Michael
D. Larson Bankrate.com
Down 19 points one week. Up 12 points the next. The
mortgage rate chart has looked like something you might see on an
"ER" EKG machine lately.
Unfortunately, many borrowers are letting their heart
rates jump around unnecessarily too. They're either fruitlessly
waiting to lock in on the expectation that 6.5 percent, 30-year
rates will return or panicking because rates moved an eighth of
a percentage point higher when they weren't looking.
In the interest of keeping emergency room visits down,
I'm going to offer this word of advice: Stop obsessing about mortgage
rates so much! Even though they've been bouncing around a lot day
to day, they haven't really changed all year and probably won't
for the next few months.
Indeed, 30-year fixed rates haven't risen more than
35 basis points above 7 percent, nor dropped more than 10 points
below that mark, in all of 2001. Lock in on one of the weekly dips,
hop into the Family Truckster and go to the beach already.
"My take on it would be to make whatever financial
moves need to be made at this time," says Gary Jones, president
of GJones Financial Group Inc., an Asheville, N.C., mortgage brokerage.
"The way the Feds are, rates could be back up
tomorrow. They're all over the board."
Why the confusion? People don't seem to understand
that the U.S. economy is in a trough right now. Some say the sky
is falling, massive recession is right around the corner and (as
one e-mailer actually wrote me in April) mortgage rates will hit
4 percent over the next year.
Others say a snapback rally in the stock market, interest
rates and the economy is right around the corner because of the
Federal Reserve Board's aggressive rate cuts.
The truth, in my humble opinion, lies somewhere in
between. Yes, unemployment will likely continue to rise as the year
progresses, and companies will continue to be cautious with travel
and discretionary spending. That will put a small damper on the
home purchase market and keep consumers slightly on edge.
But at the same time, recent reports show consumers
aren't putting spending completely on hold. That means many manufacturers
will start boosting production and stop firing people in the months
ahead.
No matter what some doubting Thomases may say, lower
interest rates will entice many consumers to boost spending in the
months ahead too. Tens of thousands of borrowers have been able
to lower their monthly debt burdens by refinancing mortgages this
year, for example.
And with rates on everything from auto loans to home
equity lines of credit still falling, many more will refinance car
loans and consolidate high-interest credit card debt. That will
free up tens or even hundreds of dollars a month per household in
new spending power, which should be further bolstered by tax rebates
this summer.
This backdrop provides a recipe for stable mortgage
rates over the next several weeks. There will certainly be short-term
fluctuations as various economic reports alternatively make the
"doom-and-gloom" and "peachy-keen" scenarios
look more likely.
But mortgage hunters shouldn't let their pulses quicken
too much. Consider just locking in on one of the short-term dips,
pouring a margarita and enjoying the summer-like heat.
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