The
contract rate on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage, the most popular
U.S. home loan, rose by 0.15 percentage point to 3.23% in the
week ended Feb. 26, the Mortgage Bankers Association said on
Wednesday.
That was the largest weekly increase since last March and marks
the fourth straight weekly rise in borrowing costs. With the
increase, mortgage rates have risen 0.37 percentage point from
their record low of 2.86% early this year.
The MBA said its weekly index of mortgage applications rose 0.5%
to 794.5, its first increase in four weeks.
"The housing market is entering the busy spring buying season
with strong demand," said Joel Kan, MBA's Associate Vice
President of Economic and Industry Forecasting. "Purchase
applications increased, with a rise in government applications –
likely first-time buyers – pulling down the average loan size
for the first time in six weeks."
The housing market has been one of the persistent bright spots
throughout the pandemic-induced recession, now a year old. But
much of the strength has come from historically low interest
rates, and economists had worried the rapid rise in Treasury
yields in the last several weeks risked choking off that
activity.
The 10-year U.S. Treasury note yield, which heavily influences
mortgage rates, has risen by roughly half a percentage point
since early January to around 1.4%.
(Reporting By Dan Burns; Editing by Chris Reese)
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