By Molly Smith | Bloomberg
Applications to refinance mortgages surged for a second week as more Americans capitalized on the cheapest borrowing costs in two years.
The Mortgage Bankers Association’s refinancing index jumped 20.3% in the week ended Sept. 20 to the highest level since April 2022, the group said Wednesday. The contract rate on a 30-year fixed mortgage eased 2 basis points to 6.13%, the eighth straight weekly drop and the longest stretch of declines since 2018-2019.
That helped boost the group’s home-purchase applications index by 1.4% last week to the highest level since early February. The fifth straight weekly advance in the measure points to burgeoning demand in a housing market that’s gradually finding some footing.
At the same time, home financing costs may start to stabilize. Yields on the 10-year Treasury note have edged higher in the last week as traders debate the magnitude of Federal Reserve’s expected interest-rate cut in November as well as the path for reductions.
The average contract rate on a 15-year mortgage and the five-year adjustable-rate mortgage ticked up last week after sharp declines in the prior two weeks.
The MBA survey, which has been conducted weekly since 1990, uses responses from mortgage bankers, commercial banks and thrifts. The data cover more than 75% of all retail residential mortgage applications in the US.
Related Articles
Lazerson: Rate cut means home prices will moderate as inventory rises
What consumers should know about Fed rate cuts
This California economist disagrees with Fed’s giant rate cut
Are Fed cuts already built into falling mortgage rates?
Remember 1995 and Alan Greenspan’s ‘soft landing’?