Will mortgage rates keep going up?

Did the Fed's Powell just tap the brakes on mortgage rates? Don't bet on it

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell doesn't see any good reason why average 30-year mortgage rates pole-vaulted over the 3% line in the last week, to the highest level since mid-June.

Rates have been following along as the interest on Treasury bonds has skyrocketed due to worries that an improving economy will stoke inflation. But Powell tells members of Congress that inflation is still "soft" and that the road ahead for the economy is "highly uncertain."

Will his reassurances help push mortgage rates back down? Experts say borrowers who want to be on the safe side should lock one of today's mortgage rates — because they could go higher.

What's been happening to mortgage rates?

Just weeks after dipping to new all-time lows, mortgage rates have suddenly come roaring back. On Monday, Mortgage News Daily had 30-year fixed-rate mortgages averaging 3.10% — way up from 2.86% on Friday Feb. 12, ahead of Presidents Day weekend.

For borrowers, "it's time to wake up," writes Matthew Graham, MND's chief operating officer.

Mortgage rates tend to track the yield (interest) on the 10-year Treasury note, which has soared to places not seen in almost a year. Analysts say that rise is a reflection of investors' fears that COVID vaccinations and new stimulus checks will help heat up the economy too fast and kick up inflation.

The Fed's Powell doesn't sound too concerned about that.

"Following large declines in the spring, consumer prices partially rebounded over the rest of last year. However, for some of the sectors that have been most adversely affected by the pandemic, prices remain particularly soft," he told members of the Senate Banking Committee on Tuesday.

The Fed chief says inflation remains below 2% — the central bank's goal. And, though things should improve later this year, "the economic recovery remains uneven and far from complete, and the path ahead is highly uncertain," Powell says.

Powell's testimony may not have much impact

Despite the chairman's soothing words, the bond market doesn't seem willing to shrug off the risk of inflation. The 10-year Treasury yield was little changed during and after his testimony — and that's probably not helpful for would-be borrowers who hope mortgage rates will approach record lows again.

"It's beginning to look as if last week’s rises in mortgage rates might stick," writes Peter Warden, editor of the website The Mortgage Reports. "They may not have much further to climb. But it’s hard to currently see reasons why they should fall back significantly anytime soon."

Here's a reality check, if you're considering buying a home or refinancing an existing mortgage and think 30-year mortgage rates at 3.10% are too high and worth waiting out: 10 years ago, rates were averaging close to 5%, according to mortgage giant Freddie Mac. And, 20 years ago, they were over 7%.

Given the risk that rates will rise further, Warden is recommending that his readers lock a rate now, whether they've got a loan that's closing in seven days or 60 days.

To find the lowest rate available in your area and for a person with your credit score, you need to shop around and compare multiple mortgage offers. More than one study has found comparing at least five loan offers can save you thousands of dollars over time.

Dust off those comparison shopping skills when it's time to buy or renew your homeowners insurance. Get rate quotes from several insurers and you're likely to find a lower price on the coverage you need.


If there is a home that you would like more information about, if you are considering selling a property, or if you have questions about the housing market in your neighborhood, please reach out. We’re here to help.

Search Homes in Colorado

Search Homes in Oklahoma

5 first-time homebuyer mistakes to avoid

image.jpg

The first-time homebuyer process is a lengthy one, and if you’re not careful, there’s a lot that can throw you off-track.

From low appraisals to surprise credit checks, a number of hurdles could slow your purchase or even derail it altogether.

Are you on the hunt for a new home? Want to make sure your purchase goes off without a hitch? Then take steps to avoid these all-too-common first-time homebuyer mistakes:

1. Home insurance hiccups

Your lender is going to require an adequate home insurance policy before they’ll close on your loan. If you forget to secure one or your policy start date doesn’t align with your closing, it could throw things off schedule. 

There also may be cases when a home isn’t insurable. This might occur if the previous homeowner made an insurance claim for some sort of high-risk condition — like mold or severe water damage.

2. Low appraisals

Not many first-time homebuyers have a good understanding of appraisals. To put it simply, if your appraisal comes in lower than your offer, it could send things back to square one. You’ll either need to pay the difference, renegotiate with the seller or back out of the deal entirely. Your lender won’t cover more than the appraised value.

To prevent this, always do your research before submitting an offer. Look at comparable sales in the area and ask your agent to help you determine a right-sized bid that aligns with those numbers. 

3. Credit problems

Many lenders will re-check your credit just before closing on your loan. This can be problematic if you’ve made any major purchases in the last few weeks or if you’ve applied for other loans or credit cards in that time. 

Fortunately, this is an easy one to avoid. Just keep a tight rein on your spending in the weeks leading up to your home purchase, and save big-ticket buys like furniture and new cars until after you’ve closed on your loan.

4. Errors on homebuyer loan docs

If you spot an issue on your final closing disclosures or your name is misspelled on your loan documents, it could delay your closing. Your lender will need to amend the paperwork before it can be signed and notarized.

As a first-time homebuyer, it’s critical to review any documents you receive from your lender right away. If there’s an error, report it to your loan officer as soon as possible.

5. Problematic walkthroughs

Before you close on your loan, you’ll have the opportunity to walk through the house one more time, making sure any repairs you requested were done and that the owners cleared out their property and left the place in good condition. 

If that’s not the scenario you walk into, you’ll have to work with your agent to resolve the issue. They may need to ask for closing cost credits to help you cover any additional repairs, cleaning or trash removal services that might be necessary due to the seller’s negligence.

Be a proactive first-time homebuyer

As a first-time homebuyer, you want your home purchase to stay on track, and it’s important to be proactive as you approach the big day. Keep your spending in check, attend your walkthrough as early as possible and be thorough when reviewing your loan documents. The quicker you catch a potential issue, the less likely it will derail your transaction. 

(Housing Wire)


If there is a home that you would like more information about, if you are considering selling a property, or if you have questions about the housing market in your neighborhood, please reach out. We’re here to help.

Search Homes in Colorado

Search Homes in Oklahoma

Millennial First-Time Buyers Are Giving Up These Amenities for Better Deals

Sacrifice a private yard for the home you’ve been waiting for.

Life—and home buying—is all about compromise. And according to a new study, millennials, the largest group of first-time buyers ever, are willing to give up some pretty great amenities to purchase their first home. Just as how House Hunters contestants are made to choose between a two-car garage and a paved patio rather than look at a fourth listing, first-time buyers are willing to sacrifice for the sake of taking the plunge into home ownership. 

Choosing the right assets to let go of can reveal great needles in the haystack—particularly in areas with higher inventory. We scoured the America at Home Study to find out which made the most sense. 

Pass on the Personal Backyard or Balcony

It turns out that while mowing the lawn and waving to the neighbors looks nice in films, it’s something buyers are readily leaving behind to fully commit to investing in a place. More than half of those polled said they’d give up a private yard or outdoor space in order to buy within their budget. Another plus: Ditching the outdoors can help narrow your search.

You Don’t Need a New Build

In the survey, participants were asked a series of questions in two waves, once in April and again in October. Over those six months, people let go the idea of a shiny new house and embraced finding an older one with character—to the tune of a 12 percent increase in responses to the polls. Retro is back, baby!

Consider Moving Farther Than Across Town

You’re about to buy a building! Go big or go home—literally. If you’re willing to shake up your entire life by taking on a mortgage, it might also be worth relocating to a new city. With remote working as the new standard, you don’t need to pay Manhattan rent when you can dial into a Zoom call from Philadelphia instead. Per the report, nearly half of participants agreed, with 41 percent listing transitioning to a more rural area or a new destination as a fair trade-off—a notion that then increased to 46 percent in the second wave of the survey. If there’s any kind of silver lining to the past year, it’s that new owners can catch a place they really want to buy rather than squeezing a small starter option for everything it’s got.


If there is a home that you would like more information about, if you are considering selling a property, or if you have questions about the housing market in your neighborhood, please reach out. We’re here to help.

Search Homes in Colorado

Search Homes in Oklahoma

3 Things You’d Better Have if You Hope to Buy a Home This Year

Buying a home won't be easy in 2021. But there are some workarounds if you don't have 20% down and a 750 credit score

Buying a home is a major endeavor, no matter when you do it. For those hoping to buy in 2021, an ongoing recession and global pandemic only add to the headwinds.

More than 1 in 10 Americans (11%) say they plan on buying a house in the next 12 months, according to NerdWallet’s 2021 Home Buyer Report. Some could be among the 39% who intended to buy in 2020 but postponed or canceled those plans due to the pandemic. Still others may be newly attracted to the market amid record low interest rates. No matter who they are, they’ll need to be strategic while navigating a home purchase during these tumultuous times.

Prices are high, inventory is scarce, and mortgage lenders have raised standards for qualifying applications. Buying a home in 2021 won’t come easy, but millions of Americans will manage it in the end.

A successful 2021 home purchase will require the following:

An Attractive Mortgage Application

Given the current economic instability, mortgage lenders have raised the bar on what makes a loan application acceptable, both on conventional loans and government-backed loans, such as those insured by the Federal Housing Administration. Borrowers hoping to qualify for the best interest rates will need to have a stable income, healthy down payment, strong credit and a modest amount of debt.

Conventional borrowers in 2020 had FICO  (FICO) - Get Report scores over 750, on average, according to mortgage data provider Ellie Mae. Prospective borrowers who fall a bit short of this can do several things to build up their score, including continuing on-time payments, paying down credit card debt and limiting new applications for credit until it’s time to apply for a mortgage.

That same data indicates that borrowers last year were putting about 20% down on conventional loans. So while a 20% down payment isn’t required — and there are low-down-payment programs available — borrowers hoping for a conventional loan will have the best odds of approval with a larger down payment.

Finally, strive to keep your debt-to-income ratio at 30% or lower, if possible. This ratio captures the amount of your monthly debt obligations compared with your monthly income. Lower is better, but average DTI for conventional loans in 2020 was about 35%.

A Flexible Mindset

Having a long list of must-haves may make your home search futile. Average monthly inventory was down 28% in 2020 compared with 2019 — and much lower in some places — and there are no signs it will soon change. Because there are so few homes to choose from, the pickier you are, the more difficult it will be to find a home that rises to your expectations.

If homeownership, rather than owning your dream home, is your primary objective, get real about what you need versus what you want, and what you’re willing to go without. For example, you might need three bedrooms to accommodate your family but be able to compromise on things like flooring materials, kitchen fixtures and whether the garage is attached.

Home features aren’t the only place flexibility will pay off. Forty-four percent of Americans have worked remotely at some point since March 1, 2020, according to the NerdWallet Home Buyer Report. And if you’re one of them, you may be able to consider new neighborhoods, a new town or even a new state for your home purchase. While inventory is scarce across the nation, not being tied to a 20-mile radius from the office opens up your options considerably.

A Particularly Competitive Offer

Buyers are competing for a limited number of homes, so sellers have the upper hand. Being competitive in 2021 will most often mean making an offer at or above listing price and, in many cases, not having much negotiating power to ask for concessions or repairs later in the process. From a seller’s perspective, if things don’t work out with the first buyer, there are many more where that one came from.

A local real estate agent will have firsthand knowledge of how homes are selling in your area and can help you write an offer with the best chance of acceptance. Steer clear of personality-based appeals, such as buyer love letters, in favor of making the offer itself as attractive as possible. Make the proposed transaction look easy to the seller with a favorable price, a pre-approval letter showing you can obtain financing, being amenable to the seller’s preferred closing date and requesting few (if any) contingencies.

This article is reprinted by permission from NerdWallet.

More From NerdWallet

Elizabeth Renter writes for NerdWallet. Email: elizabeth@nerdwallet.com. Twitter: @elizabethrenter.


If there is a home that you would like more information about, if you are considering selling a property, or if you have questions about the housing market in your neighborhood, please reach out. We’re here to help.

Search Homes in Colorado

Search Homes in Oklahoma

Joe Biden Just Gave Homeowners an Even Longer Break From Their Mortgages

 
designecologist-csVPdj60E1A-unsplash.jpg
 

As part of COVID-19 relief, you can now keep your home loan on pause for up to 18 months.

President Joe Biden has extended the government's lifelines that have helped homeowners keep their homes during the COVID financial crisis.

Many mortgage holders have been only too eager to put their payments on hold, as allowed under the relief law from last March that also brought you your very first stimulus check.

That mortgage forbearance — as it's formally known — was due to run out, but when he took office last month Biden extended the relief for an additional three months. On Tuesday, he tacked on three more months, allowing homeowners who signed up last year to keep their payments paused for as long as 18 months.

Plus, if you haven't taken advantage of forbearance yet but need some breathing room with your mortgage, you now have more time to sign up. Here's what you need to know about the program.

How Forbearance Works

Forbearance doesn’t wipe out your monthly payments, it just allows you to postpone them without getting hit by late fees. Because the credit bureau reporting of overdue payments is suspended, you won’t take a hit to your credit score for taking a break from your loan.

If you're not currently in forbearance but just got laid off or have another reason to start deferring your mortgage payments, the president has extended the enrollment window through June 30.

The relief is limited to the estimated 11 million homeowners who hold federally backed mortgages, which make up the majority of U.S. home loans. Those include:

  • Loans sold to government-sponsored mortgage giants Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac.

  • Mortgages guaranteed by U.S. agencies including the Federal Housing Administration (FHA loans), the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA loans) and the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA loans).

Americans with government-backed loans also are protected by a federal ban on foreclosures, which Biden is keeping in place until June 30, the White House announced on Tuesday. That moratorium had been scheduled to expire in March.

Once forbearance eventually ends

An estimated 2.7 million homeowners holding 5.35% of the nation's mortgage loans are currently in forbearance, according to data from the Mortgage Bankers Association.

If you're in that group, these are your options for making up your missed payments once the program is finally brought to a close.

  • Tacking them on at the end of your mortgage term.

  • Making additional payments — on top of your regular mortgage payments — for up to 12 months.

  • Agreeing to make a lump-sum repayment when the home is sold or refinanced, or when the mortgage term comes to an end. A Mortgage Bankers Association survey found this was the most popular option.

Alternatives to forbearance

Face it: Though the government has been very willing to stretch out the mortgage freeze, the forbearance program will eventually wind down and borrowers will have to pay the piper — or, in this case, the loan servicer.

If you'd rather not keep delaying your eventual day of reckoning with your mortgage, here are two ways to make your loan more manageable and stay current on your payments.

1. Refinance to cut your monthly bill.

You don’t need to keep deferring your payments to get some relief from your mortgage bills.

The economic turmoil resulting from the pandemic has resulted in the cheapest mortgage rates on record, meaning you're probably due for a refinance that could slash your housing costs.

An estimated 16.7 million homeowners have the potential to reduce their mortgage payments by an average $303 through refinancing, the mortgage technology and data provider Black Knight said earlier this month.

Refi rates can vary widely from one lender to the next, so it's crucial that you shop around. Get at least five rate quotes to find the best rate available in your area and for a person with your credit score.

2. Ask for a loan modification

Most lenders and loan servicers have been willing to work with homeowners during the pandemic. You might ask about a loan modification, which would keep you in the same mortgage but with new terms that should be easier for you to meet during this time of financial challenges.

If you fear you're at risk of defaulting, a mortgage mod allows you to change one of the key features of your loan.

You might be able to negotiate a lower interest rate or monthly payment, or the lender might be willing to shrink the balance remaining on your loan.

Modification can come with administrative or filing fees. You'd have to weigh whether those would be more expensive than the closing costs associated with refinancing your mortgage.

Visit MoneyWise for more tips on homeownership during COVID.

Related Links

search homes in colorado
search homes in oklahoma