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RATES UP: Results
of Bankrate.com's April 19, 2006, weekly national survey of
large lenders and the effect on monthly payments for a $165,000
loan: |
| Inflation report pushes up 30-year
mortgage rate |
| By Holden
Lewis Bankrate.com |
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Just when you thought mortgage rates might level off
or head down, inflation pulls them back up. Well, some of them,
anyway.
The benchmark 30-year fixed-rate mortgage rose for
the fourth week in a row. It went up 1 basis point, to 6.57 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 0.41 discount and
origination points. One year ago, the mortgage index was 5.86 percent;
four weeks ago, it was 6.39 percent. The last time the 30-year fixed
rate was this high was June 26, 2002, when it also was 6.57 percent.
The benchmark 15-year fixed-rate mortgage rose 2
basis points to 6.23 percent. The benchmark 5/1 adjustable-rate
mortgage went the other direction, falling 6 basis points to 6.19
percent.
Blame inflation report
Rates on long-term mortgages would have dropped this week if not
for the release Wednesday morning of the consumer price index for
March. Core prices rose faster than Wall Street had been expecting,
so long-term interest rates went up, too. But short-term mortgages
fell on the news that the Fed might soon stop raising short-term
interest rates.
On Tuesday, the Federal Reserve released the
minutes from its March 28 rate policy meeting, and the document
hinted that the Fed's series of 15 short-term rate hikes is about
to end. Yields on long-term Treasury notes, which tend to go up
and down with mortgage rates, drifted downward slightly.
Also on Tuesday, the president of the Federal Reserve
Bank of San Francisco said in a speech
that inflation was within her "comfort zone," that short-term
interest rates were "close to a neutral stance," and that
she "will be highly alert to the possibility of the policy
tightening going too far." Those comments reinforced the message
Wall Street gleaned from the Fed's minutes: that the central bank
has probably just one more rate increase in store.
But in the speech, San Fran Fed Chief Janet Yellen
added that the inflation risks are "tilted slightly to the
upside." That's a signal that, on balance, she believes that
high inflation is more probable than recession. "I view decisions
about the path of policy going forward as quite data-dependent,"
she said at the Bay Area Council 2006 Outlook Conference in San
Jose, Calif.
Here come the data
Then the data came in and said prices went up faster than expected
in March. The prospect of higher inflation causes long-term rates
to rise, and that's what happened Wednesday. But they didn't rise
a lot, because the CPI isn't necessarily the most trustworthy bit
of price information. Fed economists famously rely more on the core
personal consumption expenditures, another measurement of prices.
"There are several measures, but it's the core
PCE -- personal consumption expenditures minus food and energy --
that they're most interested in tracking," says Orawin Velz,
director of economic forecasting for the Mortgage Bankers Association.
"They have to keep watching it right now because the labor
market is very tight and capacity utilization is the highest in
six years."
A tight labor market means job-seekers and employees
can fetch higher wages, and high capacity utilization means factories,
mines, refineries, railroads and the like are running closer to
their limits. Both are markers for inflation.
Velz says it's much too early to judge how interest
rates, both short-term and long-term, will play out. The Fed is
almost certain to raise the federal
funds rate another quarter-point, to 5 percent, when it meets
May 10, she says. After that, two CPI reports, and one or two PCE
reports, will come out before the Fed meets again, on June 29.
If those reports show that inflation continues to
accelerate, the Fed will raise short-term rates again June 29, to
5.25 percent. "But if core inflation slows in the next two
months, that would be a good cause to pause," Velz says. She
predicts that the data indeed will show a slowing economy.
Was that a sputter?
We might have seen a hint of a slowdown on Tuesday, when the report
on March housing starts came in. Starts declined 6.8 percent overall,
and single-family-housing starts fell 12 percent. For the first
time since December, housing starts were at an annual pace of less
than 2 million.
It wasn't a surprise and is no big deal, says Jeff
Lyons, president of RealEstate.com. "It's still going to be
an incredibly strong year," he says, adding that housing starts
were stronger in the first three months of this year than they were
in the first quarter of 2005, the record year.
"It's going to take us a little time to work
out of the heights of the last couple of years to a more sustainable
level," Lyons says. Rising interest rates "make it a little
tougher for people to buy homes, so things slow down a bit."
But he still expects 2006 to be the third-strongest
year on record for housing starts, after 2005 and 2004.
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