| RATES
STALL: Results
of Bankrate.com's Feb. 2, 2005, Weekly National Survey and the
effect on monthly payments for a $165,000 loan: |
Mortgage rates stall
By Holden
Lewis Bankrate.com
Mortgage rates stalled this week, with barely a change across the
board.
The benchmark 30-year fixed-rate mortgage slipped
to its lowest point since October 2004, falling 1 basis
point to 5.67 percent, according to the Bankrate.com national survey
of large lenders. A basis point is one-hundredth of 1 percentage
point. The mortgages in this week's survey had an average total
of 0.32 discount and origination points. One year ago, the mortgage
index was 5.72 percent.
The benchmark 15-year fixed-rate mortgage inched
up 2 basis points to 5.16 percent. The benchmark one-year adjustable-rate
mortgage held steady at 4.48 percent.
Mortgage bankers often talk of the spread,
or difference, between different mortgage products. Let's take a
look at the narrowing spread between the 30-year fixed and the one-year
adjustable. A month ago, the average rate on a 30-year fixed was
5.81 percent and on the one-year ARM, 4.38 percent. Subtract the
ARM rate from the fixed rate and you have a spread of 1.43 percentage
points. In the following weeks that spread has shrunken to 1.32
percent, then 1.27 percent, then 1.20 percent, and this week's 1.19
percent.
A year ago, the spread was 2.04 percent. When compared
to the 30-year fixed, a one-year ARM was a much better deal a year
ago than it is now.
Naturally, you would assume that ARMs are less popular
now than a year ago, when they were comparatively a better deal.
That would be an erroneous assumption. A year ago, about 27 percent
of mortgage applications were for ARMs; last week, it was more than
32 percent, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.
It's a bizarre world when ARM rates go up and fixed
rates go down, and people embrace ARMs anyway. Bankers attribute
this head-scratching development to the rise of the hybrid mortgage,
and specifically a hybrid called the 5/1 ARM.
A 5/1 ARM has an initial rate that's higher than
that of a one-year ARM, but lower than that of a 30-year fixed.
It keeps that initial rate for five years and then is adjusted annually
thereafter. There are also 3/1, 7/1, 10/1 and other hybrid ARMs.
The Mortgage Bankers Association doesn't differentiate
between one-year and hybrid ARMs in its weekly statistics. Bankers
believe that the 5/1 hybrid makes up about 40 percent of new ARMs
and is supplanting the one-year as the most-popular adjustable.
Freddie Mac started tracking weekly movements in the rates of 5/1
ARMs, and Bankrate.com will replace the one-year ARM with the 5/1
ARM in its weekly index, starting next month.
A lot of people "would tell you the 30-year
fixed-rate loan isn't the loan of choice anymore," says Doug
Perry, senior vice president of Countrywide Home Loans. "There
are a lot of experts who say when you're getting a 30-year fixed-rate
loan, you are overbuying that fixed-rate period. And you're paying
extra every month."
Perry agrees with most experts when he says hybrid
ARMs are a good fit for lots of people, because most homeowners
don't hold their mortgages for 30 years -- they sell the home or
refinance the loan long before then. But he is reluctant to give
general advice, because everyone's situation is different.
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