Wednesday,
July 23
Posted
11 a.m. EDT
'SCUSE
ME:
... while rates kiss
the sky. Mortgage rates
have been rocketing upward
the past few days,
to levels they haven't
seen since this time last
year.
Bankrate
conducts its weekly rate
survey every Wednesday.
Last week, the 30-year
fixed averaged 6.42 percent
in our survey; this week,
it'll be around 6.8 percent.
It's rare for rates to
rise this quickly. In
February, we had a one-week
rise of 41 basis points,
the biggest advance since
the autumn of 1998.
What's behind
this rapid increase in
rates? Fears of credit
quality. Investors want
to be compensated for
taking the risk of buying
mortgages that eventually
could go into delinquency
and default in large numbers.
Borrowers are seen as
riskier than they were
before.
Inflation
expectations are pushing
rates up, too.
Friday,
July 18
Posted
2 p.m. EDT
NONSTOP:
Mortgage rates just keep
rising. To be more precise,
the prices of mortgage
bonds continue to plunge,
for the third day in a
row. When mortgage bond
prices fall, mortgage
rates rise.
All told,
we're talking about a
rise in mortgage rates
of about 40 basis points
this week, with most of
the damage coming Tuesday
and yesterday. Today,
we saw a rise of about
an eighth of a percentage
point -- before noon.
Mortgage
rates are rising faster
than Treasury yields,
which implies that investors
are running away from
mortgage bonds. Why? It's
a bunch of little things,
mortgage banker Dick Lepre
tells me, but mostly it
comes down to concerns
about falling house prices
and growing numbers of
foreclosures. Investors
demand higher mortgage
rates to compensate for
the risks.
CARROTS
AND STICKS: This
week, I wrote about IndyMac
and the FDIC's plan to
experiment with short
refis. A short refi is
when you owe more than
the house is worth and
you can't afford the monthly
payments, so some of the
debt is forgiven, and
you refinance for a smaller
amount, into a loan that
you presumably can afford.
I wrote
that I was "all for
experimenting with short
refis for owner-occupants
who are in genuine financial
hardship."
A reader
named Bob replies: "I
don't agree with this.
What about those of us
who did the right thing
and can afford our houses?
My house has gone down
in value at least 15 percent
since we purchased last
year. Why should I be
penalized for purchasing
a house that I can afford,
while my neighbor gets
to refi into smaller loan?
I'd like a short refi,
too. I could use a couple
extra hundred dollars
each month."
Despite
all the technical potholes
in the road to short refis,
their future ultimately
is a political question.
Bob frames one side of
this political debate
well. I agree with him,
and with people on all
sides of this issue. I
doubt I'm alone in my
ambivalence, and that's
going to make this issue
hard to resolve.
I would
like to get away from
talking about punishment,
though. Bob asks, "Why
should I be penalized
for purchasing a house
that I can afford?"
I don't think anyone is
penalized for buying a
house that they can afford.
Bob lives in a house that
he can afford, and that
seems like its own reward,
and not a penalty.
When a neighbor
can't afford his mortgage,
and he gets a short refi
that enables him to stay
in the house, I don't
see that as a penalty
imposed on the other neighbors.
I don't think it's any
of the neighbors' business.
It doesn't affect them,
except from the standpoint
that they don't have to
live next to a house in
foreclosure.
Yes, I would
like to save a couple
hundred extra dollars
a month, too. But it's
no skin off my nose if
my neighbor gets a break
like that and I don't.
In large
part, I'm playing devil's
advocate here -- because
I simultaneously agree
with the counterargument
I just made, and with
Bob's argument. If you
forced me to jump onto
one side of the fence,
I suppose I'd hop on my
side. I'd say that your
neighbor's personal finances
are none of your business.
Anyway,
the real winner isn't
the homeowner who gets
a short refi and a lower
mortgage payment. The
winner is the person who
sold that house at an
inflated price. Why don't
people want to penalize
that guy?
Thursday,
July 17
Posted
2 p.m. EDT
UP
AND AWAY:
Mortgage rates are rising
fast -- almost a quarter
point compared to yesterday.
In a case of terrible
timing, our survey here
at Bankrate says that
rates fell in the last
week. The same happened
with Freddie Mac's oft-cited
survey.
In Bankrate's
weekly sample, the average
rate on a 30-year fixed
fell
6 basis points this
week, to 6.42 percent.
Freddie Mac has the 30-year
fixed down 11 basis points,
to 6.26 percent.
If Bankrate's
survey had been conducted
yesterday the afternoon
rather than in the morning,
it would have shown a
modest increase of 5 basis points to
10 basis points. If it
were conducted today,
it would show about a
25 basis point increase
from a week ago.
Investors
appear to be worried about
credit quality of mortgages
-- in other words, whether
payments will come in
as expected. As they buy
mortgages, they demand
higher rates to compensate
for the risk they're taking.
To illustrate
what I'm talking about,
let's look at the yields
paid on 10-year Treasury
notes compared to the
required net yields that
Freddie Mac requires on
the mortgages that it
buys. Freddie's required
net yields are a useful
stand-in for mortgage
rates.
At the beginning
of the month, Freddie's
required net yield was
6.2 percent, and the 10-year
Treasury yielded 4.01
percent. This afternoon,
Freddie's required net
yield is 6.29 percent,
and the 10-year Treasury's
yield is the same as 16
days ago -- 4.01 percent.
The difference between
the two yields is greater
-- 2.28 percentage points
now, compared to 2.19
percent at the beginning
of the month.
Whenever
you hear someone on TV
talk about "widening
spreads," this is
the phenomenon they're
talking about. Usually
they're not comparing
10-year yields to mortgage
rates; they're comparing
10-year Treasury yields
to 2-year Treasury yields,
or Treasury debt to corporate
debt. Same concept, though.
I expected
yields to narrow when
the feds announced that
they would lend money
to Fannie or Freddie if
needed. Just the opposite
has happened. It's an
indication that investors
continue to worry about
the mortgage market and
Fannie's and Freddie's
roles in it.
OUT
OF THE BARN: In
an article this week,
I explain how the Federal
Reserve banned
stated-income subprime
loans, long after
stated-income loans dried
up and subprime mortgages
were swallowed up by the
FHA.