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John Topa, Northeast PA Mortgage Advisor

We Konw that Prime Rate will Likely Rise Before It Falls

Three weeks after adjourning, Federal Reserve officials release detailed minutes of their most recent meeting.  The April 30, 2008 minutes were released WednesdayThree weeks after adjourning, Federal Reserve officials release detailed minutes of their most recent meeting.

The April 30, 2008 minutes were released Wednesday and it affirmed traders' beliefs that the Federal Reserve will not be in a hurry to lower the Fed Funds Rate again.

This is bad news for two groups of people whose borrowing costs are tied to Prime Rate, the interest rate that is 3 percentage points higher than the Fed Funds Rate:

  1. Homeowners with home equity lines of credit
  2. Americans with credit card debt

Because Prime Rate moves in lock-step with the Fed Funds Rate, it, too, has fallen by 3.25 percent since September and now rests at 5.000 percent.

With the release of the April FOMC Minutes, though, it appears that Prime Rate is more likely to increase than to decrease moving forward.

If your home equity line of credit offers a "convert-to-fixed-rate" option, now may be a good time to consider switching over. Be sure to talk with your loan officer first, though -- he/she may have alternate options for you.

(Image courtesy: The Wall Street Journal Online)

John Topa, First Sunrise Mortgage, Northeast PA Mortgage Advisor. www.FirstSunriseMortgage.com

Simple Real Estate Definitions: Loan To Value

Loan-to-value is a math formula that represents the relationship between how much a home is "worth" and how much money is borrowed against it.

Loan-to-value is often abbreviated as "LTV" and is one of the many factors that lenders consider when underwriting a mortgage application.

The math formula is straightforward:

Loan-to-value calculation

In the LTV equation, Loan Size is the amount of money borrowed from the bank and Home Value is the lower of the home's purchase price or appraised value.

Home loans with low loan-to-value ratios are usually less risky for banks. This is one reason why mortgage rates tend to be more favorable for home buyers and homeowners when their respective LTVs are low.

Typically, a "low" LTV loan is one in which the loan-to-value is 80 percent or less. In some instances, however, 70 percent is considered "low". The cut-off point depends on the mortgage lender and the mortgage product.

On a home purchase, the one way to lower LTV is to make a larger downpayment, thereby reducing the LTV equation's numerator. Buying a home for below-market value would not reduce LTV, for example, because the purchase price would be used as the equation's denominator.

On a home loan refinance, the denominator is always the home's appraised value.

John Topa, First Sunrise Mortgage, Northeast PA Mortgage Advisor. www.FirstSunriseMortgage.com

Shopping for the best rate? Make sure you get up to the minute pricing.

Yesterday, several mortgage lenders issued three separate "rate sheets" in response to the changing mortgage market.

It was the fourth time in the last 6 trading days that mortgage lenders issued multiple rate sheets in a day, and continued the trend that started in mid-January.

The yo-yo nature of mortgage rates underscores the importance of making mortgage rate comparisons within a limited time frame.

Multiple quotes should be gathered with an hour of each other and, even then, it's prudent to ask your lender: "Has there been a mortgage rate reprice in the last hour?"

The current market volatility is in contrast to the "normal" environment of one-rate-sheet-per-day to which mortgage rate shoppers have been accustomed. But with the changing economy, we all have to adapt.

Mortgage rate quotes from this morning won't necessarily be valid this afternoon so if you're in the market for a home loan, be sure to do your shopping in a limited timeframe and don't forget to ask about the reprice.

Looking Ahead 5/19/08

Optimism ruled the markets last week -- optimism about employment, optimism about housing, and optimism about inflation.

Mortgage rates edged lower overall.

Despite the positive sentiment from Wall Street, consumer confidence in the economy reached a 28-year low.

This is a normal divergence because investors live in the "future" of markets while Americans live in the "right now" of life where food prices are high, gas prices are still rising, and job prospects are somewhat weak.

Consumer confidence surveys have to be taken at face value, though. Yes, Americans are nervous about the economy and their household budgets, but that rarely deters them from spending.

In April, for example, Retail Sales (excluded autos) were up 0.5 percent -- more than double analyst expectations. And this was before economic stimulus checks showed up in tax-filers' mailboxes.

Perhaps this is one more reason why markets were so pleased last week.

This week, there isn't much economic information to sway markets. On Tuesday, we'll see the Producer Price Index which is like a Cost of Living for Business measurement and on Friday we'll see the Existing Home Sales report.

Strength in either will be good for economy and should benefit both stocks and bonds, and should lower mortgage rates. Weakness will have the opposite impact.

Recession Report

Retail Sales measures total receipts at stores that sell tangible "things" and -- aside from weak demand for automobiles and automobile parts -- Retail Sales displayed surprising strength in April.

So much strength, in fact, that many experts are changing their predictions about the U.S. economy's fate.

Several months ago, most pundits declared that a economic recession was all but inevitable. Today, a growing number are changing their views.

Not only are stock and credit markets improving, but data such as April's Retail Sales figures suggest that their fears were overblown.

The takeaway from a story like this is that "experts" do a much better job of interpreting the past than predicting the future. A person can make an educated guess, but it's impossible to know what the future holds for the economy, or for housing, or for mortgage rates.

Even when the outcome is "inevitable".