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July 25, 2008

San Diego Mortgage Rates Report: July 25, 2008

Mortgage rates in San Diego for July 25, 2008.  Loan amounts up to $417,000:

3/1 ARM              5.625%

5/1 ARM              5.750%

7/1 ARM              6.125%

10/1 ARM            6.375%

30 Yr Fixed          6.375%

All rates offered to the borrower with 1 point cost.  Rate quotes assume a purchase transaction with a 20% down payment, 720 credit score, and full income qualification.  Rates are subject to fluctuation.  Custom rate quotes and rate lock advice are available by calling (858)-777-9751.

SAN DIEGO MORTGAGE RATE TREND:

Next 7 days:        Slightly Lower

Next 30 days:     Slightly Lower

Next 3 months:   Neutral


July 22, 2008

San Diego Mortgage Rates Report: July 22, 2008

Mortgage rates in San Diego for July 22, 2008.  Loan amounts up to $417,000:

3/1 ARM              5.750%

5/1 ARM              5.875%

7/1 ARM              6.250%

10/1 ARM            6.500%

30 Yr Fixed          6.625%

All rates offered to the borrower with 1 point cost.  Rate quotes assume a purchase transaction with a 20% down payment, 720 credit score, and full income qualification.  Rates are subject to fluctuation.  Custom rate quotes and rate lock advice are available by calling (858)-777-9751.

SAN DIEGO MORTGAGE RATE TREND:

Next 7 days:        Slightly Lower

Next 30 days:     Lower

Next 3 months:   Neutral

What a difference a week makes, huh?  Last Tuesday, I signaled that a short-term increase in rates was likely when I changed the 7-day outlook to "slightly higher" from neutral.  I felt that the rally in mortgage bonds was overdone and that traders would sell off a bit; I had no idea it would be this drastic.

If you click the link, you'll see that I offered a 30-year fixed at 6.0%. last Tuesday- today, the 30-year fixed rate loan is a full .5% higher.  In fact, almost every loan program is .5% higher than it was last week.  The problem?  Wall Street thinks the worst is over for banks and that inflation is going to be the #1 target for the Fed in the next few months.  ' Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson is certainly telling the markets that the banking crisis should be averted by Christmas.

So will the Fed raise interest rates in 2008?  I'm not so certain that they will.  The housing decline has been the worst since The Great Depression.  Fed Chairman, Ben Bernanke, is an expert on monetary policy in the Depression.  He subscribes to the Milton Friedman theory that monetary policy must accommodate a healthy banking system. His 2004 speech signaled two things two us:

(1)- Bernanke believes that tightening during a slowdown could cause further economic declines:

According to Friedman and Schwartz, the Fed's tight-money policies led to the onset of a recession in August 1929, according to the official dating by the National Bureau of Economic Research. The slowdown in economic activity, together with high interest rates, was in all likelihood the most important source of the stock market crash that followed in October. In other words, the market crash, rather than being the cause of the Depression, as popular legend has it, was in fact largely the result of an economic slowdown and the inappropriate monetary policies that preceded it. Of course, the stock market crash only worsened the economic situation, hurting consumer and business confidence and contributing to a still deeper downturn in 1930.

(2) Bernanke believes that a contracting banking sector withdraws a HUGE amount of money out of the economy:

The banking crisis had highly detrimental effects on the broader economy. Friedman and Schwartz emphasized the effects of bank failures on the money supply. Because bank deposits are a form of money, the closing of many banks greatly exacerbated the decline in the money supply. Moreover, afraid to leave their funds in banks, people hoarded cash, for example by burying their savings in coffee cans in the back yard. Hoarding effectively removed money from circulation, adding further to the deflationary pressures. Moreover, as I emphasized in early research of my own (Bernanke, 1983), the virtual shutting down of the U.S. banking system also deprived the economy of an important source of credit and other services normally provided by banks

His conclusion is foreshadowing:

Some important lessons emerge from the story. One lesson is that ideas are critical. The gold standard orthodoxy, the adherence of some Federal Reserve policymakers to the liquidationist thesis, and the incorrect view that low nominal interest rates necessarily signaled monetary ease, all led policymakers astray, with disastrous consequences. We should not underestimate the need for careful research and analysis in guiding policy. Another lesson is that central banks and other governmental agencies have an important responsibility to maintain financial stability. The banking crises of the 1930s, both in the United States and abroad, were a significant source of output declines, both through their effects on money supplies and on credit supplies. Finally, perhaps the most important lesson of all is that price stability should be a key objective of monetary policy. By allowing persistent declines in the money supply and in the price level, the Federal Reserve of the late 1920s and 1930s greatly destabilized the U.S. economy and, through the workings of the gold standard, the economies of many other nations as well.

I don't see the Fed aggressively raising interest rates to prop up the dollar. I think reduced demand will bring oil prices below the $100/barrel mark which will strengthen the dollar.  The Fed's focus should have been (in the 1930s) and will be (this decade) to promote a healthy banking system.    While the banks are reporting lower losses, they still aren't healthy. The recent good news from the banking sector needs to be sustainable.  Look for the Fed to restrain itself from raising rates until 2009.

Are higher mortgage rates on the horizon?  Sure, in 2009.  The run up in mortgage rates I predicted, two weeks ago, has already happened.  I don't think mortgage rates go much higher in 2008. 

July 17, 2008

San Diego Mortgage Rates Report: July 17, 2008

Mortgage rates in San Diego for July 17, 2008.  Loan amounts up to $417,000:

3/1 ARM              5.250%

5/1 ARM              5.625%

7/1 ARM              6.000%

10/1 ARM            6.125%

30 Yr Fixed          6.375%

All rates offered to the borrower with 1 point cost.  Rate quotes assume a purchase transaction with a 20% down payment, 720 credit score, and full income qualification.  Rates are subject to fluctuation.  Custom rate quotes and rate lock advice are available by calling at the number below..

SAN DIEGO MORTGAGE RATE TREND:

Next 7 days:       Neutral 

Next 30 days:      Neutral 

Next 3 months:    Slightly Higher

July 15, 2008

San Diego Mortgage Rates Report: July 15, 2008

Mortgage rates in San Diego for July 15, 2008.  Loan amounts up to $417,000:

3/1 ARM              5.125%

5/1 ARM              5.250%

7/1 ARM              5.750%

10/1 ARM            5.875%

30 Yr Fixed          6.000%

All rates offered to the borrower with 1 point cost.  Rate quotes assume a purchase transaction with a 20% down payment, 720 credit score, and full income qualification.  Rates are subject to fluctuation.  Custom rate quotes and rate lock advice are available by calling at the number below..

SAN DIEGO MORTGAGE RATE TREND:

Next 7 days:       Slightly Higher 

Next 30 days:      Higher 

Next 3 months:    Higher

July 14, 2008

San Diego Mortgage Rates Report: July 14, 2008

Mortgage rates in San Diego for July 14, 2008.  Loan amounts up to $417,000:


3/1 ARM              5.125%

5/1 ARM              5.250%

7/1 ARM              5.625%

10/1 ARM            5.750%

30 Yr Fixed          6.000%

All rates offered to the borrower with 1 point cost.  Rate quotes assume a purchase transaction with a 20% down payment, 720 credit score, and full income qualification.  Rates are subject to fluctuation.  Custom rate quotes and rate lock advice are available by calling at the number below..

SAN DIEGO MORTGAGE RATE TREND:

Next 7 days:       Neutral 

Next 30 days:      Higher 

Next 3 months:    Higher


Last week was a scary one if you've been following the mortgage industry:

Senator Schumer (NY) caused an old-fashioned bank run when he wrote a letter to the San Francisco Fed President concerned about IndyMac Bank's ability to weather the storm....then, he made that letter public. IndyMac Bank ceased new loan operations, in an effort to manage the loans they have on their books, on Monday. On GFriday, the Feds closed IndyMac Bank down.

This was political grandstanding at its worst:

Sen. Schumer rejected that, saying that, while banking regulators do their work in private, lawmakers typically do theirs in public. Sen. Schumer, the head of Senate Democrats' re-election effort, threw in a political jab as well. "Clearly what was happened here was the OTS, having the second-biggest bank failure on their watch, sought to blame the messenger. In sum, it's sort of classically what this administration does. Blame the fire on the guy who called 911."

The New York Times asked if Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were insolvent and Wall Street went nuts.  Treasury Secretary Paulson stepped in and offered government support SHOULD the big mortgage guarantors fail.  Are Fannie and Freddie too big to fail?  Well, they insure almost half of this nation's $12 trillion worth of mortgage debt.  A failure would be a major disruption to housing capital and drive mortgage rates to the a MUCH higher level.

Mc Cain offered that this disruption in capital would be a blow to our economy:

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac ``are vital to Americans' ability to own their own homes,'' McCain said in response to a reporter's question during a campaign stop at a diner in Livonia, Michigan. ``They will not fail; we cannot allow them to fail.''

Obama was somewhat tenuous about Federal intervention:

But Obama advisor Jason Furman issued a statement that Obama believes "the challenges facing Fannie and Freddie are part of the broader weakness in our economy." He blamed President Bush, saying "willful neglect" by the White House of trouble in the housing market and other sectors of the economy let the problems fester to crisis stage. Then he pushed Obama's call for immediate congressional action to help homeowners caught in the bind, and at risk of foreclosure.

Ya following this?  Rather than address the problem with potential solutions, Obama's busy pointing fingers.  By discrediting Bush and continuing this credit crunch, the Democrats position themselves uniquely as the "savior" this November.  A few more public letters from Friends of Obama (FOO) and you've got a Depression-like crisis on your hands.

Was it all Alan Greenspan's fault? He's predicting a recession in his retirement.  Greenspan is the Fed Chairman who adopted the "easy money" policy after 9/11/2001.  This inflated the housing market and caused Wall Street to reach for yield through acquisition of risky mortgages.  Those loans defaulted and the balance sheets of Wall Street firms and mortgage lenders have imploded.

Alan's buddy, Fed President Bill Poole, thinks we ought to nationalize Fannie and Freddie because it's inevitable.  This former Fed official is pontificating from the faculty of the University of Delaware.

Ben Bernanke, George Bush, and Hank Paulson are the ones trying to clean up this mess.  As much as I want to levy the blame on Greenspan and Co., I can't.  I wish Alan and Bill would shut up and stop the Monday morning quarterbacking but I still won't point the finger at them.

So...who's to blame for this financial mess? 

Osama bin Laden is.  More on that some other day.  Today, consider the mortgage you have and ask yourself if you can live with it for five years.  If it works, stay put.  if you think you'll need more liquidity or a different type of loan, call me.  I believe the window of opportunity is open until the end of the summer at best.

July 11, 2008

San Diego Mortgage Rates Report: July 11, 2008

Mortgage rates in San Diego for July 8, 2008.  Loan amounts up to $417,000:


3/1 ARM              5.125%

5/1 ARM              5.375%

7/1 ARM              5.750%

10/1 ARM            5.875%

30 Yr Fixed          6.000%

All rates offered to the borrower with 1 point cost.  Rate quotes assume a purchase transaction with a 20% down payment, 720 credit score, and full income qualification.  Rates are subject to fluctuation.  Custom rate quotes and rate lock advice are available by calling at the number below..

SAN DIEGO MORTGAGE RATE TREND:

Next 7 days:       Neutral 

Next 30 days:     Neutral

Next 3 months:    Higher


Brian Brady
(858)-777-9751

Apply for a loan online

July 10, 2008

San Diego Mortgage Rates Report: July 10, 2008

Mortgage rates in San Diego for July 10, 2008.  Loan amounts up to $417,000:

(Be sure to watch the video commentary, directly below)

3/1 ARM              5.125%

5/1 ARM              5.375%

7/1 ARM              5.625%

10/1 ARM            6.000%

30 Yr Fixed          6.125%

All rates offered to the borrower with 1 point cost.  Rate quotes assume a purchase transaction with a 20% down payment, 720 credit score, and full income qualification.  Rates are subject to fluctuation.  Custom rate quotes and rate lock advice are available by calling at the number below..

SAN DIEGO MORTGAGE RATE TREND:

Next 7 days:        Lower

Next 30 days:      Slightly Lower 

Next 3 months:    Higher

San Diego Mortgage Rates Report: July 10, 2008

July 08, 2008

San Diego Mortgage Rates Report: July 8, 2008

Mortgage rates in San Diego for July 8, 2008.  Loan amounts up to $417,000:


3/1 ARM              5.250%

5/1 ARM              5.500%

7/1 ARM              5.750%

10/1 ARM            6.000%

30 Yr Fixed          6.250%

All rates offered to the borrower with 1 point cost.  Rate quotes assume a purchase transaction with a 20% down payment, 720 credit score, and full income qualification.  Rates are subject to fluctuation.  Custom rate quotes and rate lock advice are available by calling at the number below..

SAN DIEGO MORTGAGE RATE TREND:

Next 7 days:        Lower

Next 30 days:      Slightly Lower 

Next 3 months:    Higher


Brian Brady
(858)-777-9751

Apply for a loan online

July 07, 2008

San Diego Mortgage Rates Report: July 7, 2008

Mortgage rates in San Diego for July 7, 2008.  Loan amounts up to $417,000:


3/1 ARM              5.250%

5/1 ARM              5.500%

7/1 ARM              5.750%

10/1 ARM            6.000%

30 Yr Fixed          6.375%

All rates offered to the borrower with 1 point cost.  Rate quotes assume a purchase transaction with a 20% down payment, 720 credit score, and full income qualification.  Rates are subject to fluctuation.  Custom rate quotes and rate lock advice are available by calling at the number below..

SAN DIEGO MORTGAGE RATE TREND:

Next 7 days:        Lower

Next 30 days:      Slightly Lower 

Next 3 months:    Higher


Brian Brady
(858)-777-9751

Apply for a loan online

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