The
Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) said on Wednesday its average
contract interest rate for traditional 30-year mortgages inched
up to 3.06% from 2.99% in the week ending Aug. 13. The
seasonally adjusted market index tracking mortgage applications
fell 3.9% from a week earlier, reflecting a 5.3% decrease in
applications to refinance existing loans.
After hitting record lows late last year below 2.9%, mortgage
rates climbed in the first part of this year and peaked in the
spring. Rates had been drifting lower since, held down in large
part by the U.S. Federal Reserve's extraordinary stimulus
measures aimed at helping the economy rebound from the
coronavirus pandemic, but ticked higher last week after data
showed a hiring surge last month.
"Mortgage rates followed an overall increase in Treasury yields
last week, which started higher from the strong July jobs report
before slowing because of weaker consumer sentiment and concerns
about rising COVID-19 cases," said Joel Kan, MBA’s associate
vice president of economic and industry forecasting. "The
eligible pool of homeowners who stand to benefit from a
refinance is smaller now."
Purchase applications declined 0.8%, the MBA said.
(Reporting by Evan Sully; Editing by Chris Reese)
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