U.S. banks to make home loans easier
www.chinaview.cn 2009-01-09 10:21:37   Print

Special Report: Global Financial Crisis

    BEIJING, Jan. 9 -- The largest U.S. banks are starting to offer fixed home loans below 5 percent after the government began buying mortgage securities to bolster the housing market.

    JPMorgan Chase & Co is advertising 30-year mortgages as low as 4.75 percent on its Web site, Wells Fargo & Co has an offer for 4.875 percent and Bank of America Corp has rates at 5 percent. The offers are for borrowers with excellent credit who put 20 percent down.

    The Federal Reserve earlier this week began purchasing 500 billion U.S. of mortgage securities backed by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae to help lower mortgage costs. While the lower rates may lead more borrowers to refinance, it may not spur home buying in the second year of the recession after more than two million jobs were lost in 2008.

Caption The JPMorgan Chase & Co building (top) and the Bear Stearns building are pictured across the street (C), after Chase said yesterday it was buying Bear Stearns for $2 a share, in New York March 17, 2008.

Caption The JPMorgan Chase & Co building (top) and the Bear Stearns building are pictured across the street (C), after Chase said yesterday it was buying Bear Stearns for $2 a share, in New York March 17, 2008.(Xinhua/Reuters Photo)
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    "I don't know if there is a magic number now that everyone is freaking out about the economy," said Paul Miller, a mortgage industry analyst with Friedman Billings Ramsey & Co in Arlington, Virginia. "The home buyer is scared out of the market."

    Freddie Mac is expected to report 30-year fixed mortgage rates this week. The fixed rate dropped to 5.10 percent, the lowest on record, last week from 5.14 percent a week earlier, the McLean, Virginia-based mortgage finance company said on Dec. 31.

    The Fed's purchase program, which also includes buying 100 billion dollars in direct debt, is intended to lower consumer rates by reducing the supply of agency mortgage bonds issued by Fannie, Freddie and Ginnie. That would boost their prices and lower yields, in turn reducing the interest rates banks charge on new mortgages to ensure sales of the securities are profitable. Agency bonds now facilitate almost all new home lending.

    Jill Pfeiffer, a mortgage broker in San Diego, this week obtained a 4.875 percent rate on a 30-year fixed loan for a homebuyer with a credit score above 750, she said in an interview.

    "It's the lowest I've ever locked in on a 30-year fixed" since she began her business in 1996, she said.

    The loan, with Sun Trust Mortgage Inc, had no origination fee or points, a percentage of the loan amount that lenders charge, Pfeiffer said. At least two other lenders could have matched the rate, she said. She also had four inquiries from homeowners looking to refinance mortgages.

    Prices declining

    Rates are dropping as home prices in 20 major U.S. cities declined 18 percent in the year through October, the fastest rate on record, as tighter lending standards curbed sales and foreclosure sales pushed down values.

    Sales of single-family homes declined 7.6 percent in November from the prior month, the most in two decades, according to the Chicago-based National Association of Realtors. Resale prices fell 13 percent, the most since the Great Depression in the 1930s.

    The Mortgage Bankers Association's index of applications to purchase a home or refinance a loan dropped to 1,143.8 for the week ending Jan 2, from a five-year high of 1,245.7 the prior week, as consumers held out for lower rates. The group's purchase gauge rose 7.3 percent and the refinancing measure decreased 12 percent.

    Applications for home-loan refinancing and new purchases may increase as rates drop below 5 percent and exceed the five-year high of two weeks ago, Jay Brinkmann, chief economist for the Washington-based Mortgage Bankers group, said in an interview.

    "We would expect that activity to continue," Brinkmann said of increased mortgage applications.

    Lower rates may not encourage some buyers because US apartment rents are falling and landlords are offering concessions such as free rent to avoid higher vacancies.

    (Source: China Daily/Agencies)

Editor: Lv Sha
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