The Wall Street Journal recently reported on the recent fall of mortgage rates. According to Freddie Mac’s weekly survey of mortgage rates, this week saw a decline in mortgage rates with the average rate on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgages dropping to 4.80% the week of April 21, compared to 4.91% the week before. A 15-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 4.02%, down from 4.13% last week. The 5/1 adjustable rate mortgage fell from 3.78% last week to 3.61% this week and the one-year ARM dropped from 3.25% last week to 3.16% this week.
According to an article in The Wall Street Journal, many who support a government-backed housing finance system are predicting calamity for the housing markets without government mortgage guarantees, yet the Federal Reserve is telling a different story. Reserve data shows that nonbank institutional investors had assets of $28 trillion in the fourth quarter of 2010. The WSJ article went on to explain that about $13 trillion of this amount was invested in fixed income or debt securities, but only $1.8 trillion was invested in U.S. government-backed securities.
Home sales in the Hamptons are dropping. Bloomberg.com reported that the summer playground for wealthy New Yorkers has seen a 22% drop in the first quarter, plunging to 309 transactions from 396 the previous year. This drop was the largest since the second quarter of 2009. The drop isn’t due to lack of demand but, rather, the relentless snow and poor weather that kept Manhattan buyers away from the market.
Reverse Mortgage Daily recently reported that the reverse mortgage market index dropped 18% from peak levels in 2006. The latest data from the Reverse Mortgage Market Index (RMMI) shows that the amount of home equity held by seniors fell to $3.3 trillion at the end of 2010. According to RiskSpan, the growth or decline of the reverse mortgage market largely depends on the senior population growth, housing prices and senior debt levels.
The Home Equity Conversion Mortgage (HECM) is expected to generate $304 million of receipts in 2012, as reported by Reverse Mortgage Daily. This growth is largely due in part to the Federal Housing Administration’s new HECM Saver program, which gives borrowers access to home equity in amounts that are between 10-18% less than it would have been available with the HECM Standard option.