The
MBA said its Market Composite Index, which includes purchase and
refinance applications, fell 6.5% on a seasonally adjusted basis
to 288.4, compared to 645.4 one year ago.
That was despite the average contract rate on a 30-year
fixed-rate mortgage remaining off highs it reached four weeks
ago. The rate rose to 5.4% for the week ended June 3 after three
weeks of declines.
Overall though mortgage rates have risen at the sharpest pace in
decades since the start of the year as the central bank signaled
it would be more aggressive in dampening demand across the
economy in order to help quell high inflation.
The MBA said its Purchase Composite Index, a measure of all
mortgage loan applications for purchase of a single family home,
fell 7.1% from a week earlier and its Refinance Index declined
5.6%.
How quickly the Fed is able to sap the housing market's
double-digit annual price growth remains to be seen, with
competition fueled by record-low housing stock and an extremely
tight job market.
(Reporting by Lindsay Dunsmuir; Editing by Catherine Evans)
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