| Mortgage rates rise
6th week in a row |
| By Daniel
P. Ray Bankrate.com |
|
A key mortgage rate rose to its highest level in 10
months, propelled by better-than-expected economic growth and a
realization among investors that there will be no interest rate
cuts from the Fed any time soon.
The benchmark 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage rose 14
basis points to 6.61 percent, a Bankrate.com national survey of
large lenders found. A basis point is one-hundredth of 1 percentage
point. The last time the 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage was higher
was Aug. 2, 2006, when it was 6.65 percent.
The mortgages in this week's survey had an average total of 0.26
discount and origination points. One year ago, the mortgage index
was 6.69 percent; four weeks ago, it was 6.29 percent.
The 15-year, fixed-rate mortgage rose 12 basis points, to 6.33
percent. The 5/1 adjustable-rate mortgage rose 15 basis points,
to 6.52 percent.
 |
Weekly national mortgage survey |
 |
| This week's rate: |
6.61% |
6.33% |
6.52% |
| Change from last week: |
+0.14 |
+0.12 |
+0.15 |
| Monthly payment: |
$1,054.88 |
$1,421.95 |
$1,045.08 |
| Change from last week: |
+$15.22 |
+$10.80 |
+$16.23 |
A strong report on the
service sector's growth helped push rates higher. Analysts had predicted
a slowdown. Instead, the nation's dominant employment sector shot
up, the Institute for Supply Management's services index indicates.
Fast growth in the sector would tend to be inflationary, since it
could require wage increases for a fast-growing economy to find
workers.
In addition, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke repeated an
inflation warning.
In a speech
delivered by satellite to a monetary policy conference in Cape Town,
South Africa, Bernanke sounded the inflation alarm this way: "Although
core inflation seems likely to moderate gradually over time, the
risks to this forecast remain to the upside."
The Fed had issued similar warnings before, through
speeches by Fed governors and through the formal statements its
rate-setting committee delivers after each of its meetings. This
time it stuck, and investors gave up the long-clung-to hope that
the Fed would lower rates soon.
Stocks fell, and more importantly for mortgage lenders, the yield
from the 10-year Treasury moved up and flirted with the 5 percent
mark in trading Tuesday and Wednesday. The last time it finished
above 5 percent was in August 2006.
The 10-year Treasury is closely watched by mortgage
lenders. Investors buy bundles of mortgages, and because the average
mortgage lasts slightly less than 10 years, these mortgage bundles
tend to be viewed as a similar investment and move in the same direction
as the 10-year Treasury.
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