Marc's Mortgage Matter's

August 20th, 2009 9:49 AM

The roller coaster of economic news continues. (I guess it would be too easy if everything pointed to one outcome.) Last week mortgage rates improved somewhat, as they did again this week after Asian stocks fell significantly. Oil, gold, and other commodities were down (although sugar is at a 28 year high, which doesn’t help people who make jam at home and kids who eat Captain Crunch).

How far can rates drop? I haven’t heard too many experts complain about rates in general, as mortgage rates remain near their lows but the government’s borrowing needs are at historical highs. This limits the amount that rates will be able to fall so as to attract buyers of our debt, and most analysts believe that soon the buyers of our debt will be demanding higher yields. Last week the Fed left overnight rates unchanged. So what? If anything, what the last year or two has taught us is that mortgage rates have little or no correlation with Fed Funds, so even though CNBC and the media make a big deal out of the Fed's decision, mortgage rates are not impacted. Granted, any changes in rates can impact the Prime Rate (currently 3.25%), but that obviously is not the same as a 30-yr mortgage rate. So how do mortgage rates change? Mortgage rates are the result of supply and demand forces, just like any other security that is bought and sold in the open market. Securities that are backed by mortgages trade in the market, just like other fixed-income debt, and just like stocks which garner the headlines, with the prices in turn determining rates.

Three brothers married wives from different states. The first brother married a girl from Oregon. He told her that she was to do the dishes and house cleaning. It took a couple of days, but on the third day, he came home to see a clean house and dishes washed and put away.

The second brother married a girl from Florida. He gave his wife orders that she was to do all the cleaning, dishes and the cooking. The first day he didn't see any results, but the next day he saw it was better. By the third day, he saw his house was clean, the dishes were done and there was a huge dinner on the table.

The third brother married a lady from California. He ordered her to keep the house cleaned, dishes washed, lawn mowed, laundry washed, and hot meals on the table for every meal. He said the first day he didn't see anything, the second day he didn't see anything but by the third day, some of the swelling had gone down and he could see a little out of his left eye, and his arm was healed enough that he could fix himself a sandwich and load the dishwasher.




Posted by Marc (Moshe) Preger on August 20th, 2009 9:49 AMPost a Comment (0)

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