U.S. mortgage interest rates top 6% for
first time since 2008
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[September 14, 2022]
(Reuters) - The average interest
rate on the most popular U.S. home loan rose above 6% for the first time
since 2008 and is now more than double the level it was one year ago,
Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) data showed on Wednesday.
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A carpenter works on building new townhomes
that are still under construction in Tampa, Florida, U.S., May 5, 2021.
REUTERS/Octavio Jones/File Photo |
Rising mortgage rates are increasingly weighing on the
interest-rate sensitive housing sector as the Federal Reserve
pushes on with aggressively lifting borrowing costs in order to
tame high inflation. The central bank has raised its benchmark
overnight lending rate by 225 basis points since March.
Expectations for Fed tightening have led to a surge in Treasury
yields since the start of this year. The yield on the 10-year
note acts as a benchmark for mortgage rates.
The average contract rate on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage rose
by 7 basis points to 6.01% for the week ended Sept. 9, a level
not seen since towards the end of the financial crisis and Great
Recession.
The MBA also said its Market Composite Index, a measure of
mortgage loan application volume, declined 1.2% from a week
earlier and is now down 64.0% from one year ago. Its Refinance
Index fell 4.2% from the prior week and was down 83.3% compared
to one year ago.
A worse-than-expected key inflation reading on Tuesday cemented
expectations the Fed will be forced to deliver a third straight
75-basis point interest rate hike at its policy meeting next
week, with investors now predicting the central bank will have
to hike rates faster and further than previously thought.
The impact of higher interest rates is being felt across the
housing sector. New home sales plunged to a 6-1/2-year low in
July while home resales and single-family housing starts are at
two-year lows. But house prices remain elevated amid a critical
shortage of affordable homes, making a housing market collapse
unlikely.
(Reporting by Lindsay Dunsmuir; Editing by Toby Chopra)
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