As reported by the National Association of Realtors®, the Pending Home Sales Index posted its 8th consecutive monthly gain in September. It's the longest winning streak in the history of the index and Pending Home Sales are now at their highest levels since December 2006. A Pending Home Sale is a home under contract to sell, but not yet closed. It's the precursor to an Existing Home Sale. Trade group data shows that nearly 80 percent of "pending" homes close within 2 months. The majority of those remaining close within months 3 and 4. When the Pending Home Sales Index rises, it tells us that market activity has picked up. September's data confirms what we've been noticing since February -- the Buyers Market is ending. With more homes under contract in the marketplace, homebuyers typically face one or more of the following: 1. Competitive, multiple-offer situations Therefore, if you're buying a home in the next several months, know that the 8-month run in Pending Sales will lead to a run in closed sales. It should result in higher home prices, too Indeed, we're already seeing it.
The housing market continues to steam forward.
2. Reduced purchase price leverage over sellers
3. Fewer seller concessions
Rates carved out a wide range on the week, culminating in a late-Friday plunge that dropped rates by about 1/8 percent. It was the first time in 5 weeks that mortgage rates fell. Volatility like that of last week is nothing new on Wall Street; it's been a running theme in 2009. Volatility occurs when markets don't agree on what's next for the economy and, this year, there's been a lot of disagreement like that. Data has been inconsistent. Take last week for example. At 9:00 AM Tuesday morning, the Case-Shiller Index showed home prices rising nationwide. Because many analysts believe housing fueled the recession, strength in the sector is widely construed a positive for the economy. Mortgage rates rose on the news. But then, an hour later, the national consumer confidence report revealed a substantial deterioration in sentiment versus the month prior. The data forced Wall Street to do an about-face. Housing is important to the economy, but it can't affect growth like consumer spending can. When Americans are less confident about their future income, they tend to keep their wallets closed, retarding economic growth. Holiday Shopping Season is getting underway and the last thing businesses want to see is a suddenly reserved American shopper. This week, the volatility should continue. In addition to the release of key employment and housing data, the Federal Open Market Committee has a scheduled 2-day meeting. The group's Wednesday afternoon adjournment will influence mortgage rates. The Fed is widely expected to keep the Fed Funds Rate in its target range near 0.000 percent, but it won't be what the Fed does that will matter as much as what the Fedsays. If the FOMC's press release shows optimism for the economy, mortgage rates will rise in response. Alternatively, if the Fed appears more dour, rates will fall. Either way, consider locking your rate before the Wednesday afternoon announcement.
Mortgage markets improved last week after a series of hugely volatile trading sessions.
On most days, lenders issued multiple rate sheets with the trend putting rates higher in the morning, and lower in the afternoon. Overall, mortgage rates were unchanged on the week. It broke a three-week streak through which mortgage rates rose. Rates remain roughly one-half percent higher than the lows of early-October. The biggest positive for rate shoppers last week was tame economic data -- specifically concerning the Producer Price Index and the housing sector. The Producer Price Index is an inflationary, Cost of Living-like measurement for businesses and it went negative in September. Analysts weren't expecting that and the surprise pulled rates down an eighth. Similarly, in housing, both the Home Price Index and Housing Starts figures were softer than expectations. These, too, tugged mortgage rates down. At least temporarily. We say "temporarily" because -- all week long -- a steadily-weakening U.S. dollar was leading mortgage rates higher. All things equal, mortgage rates rise as the dollar loses value and, last week, the dollar touched a 14-month low versus the Euro. The greenback's weakness countered most of the "positive" news for rate shoppers and is a major reason why rates were so volatile. The volatility should continue into this week, too. With little data and no Fed speakers, look for mortgage rates to move with the market's momentum. Lately, momentum has been pulling rates higher so if you're floating a rate and trying to time a bottom, the chances are good that we already passed it. Consider locking your rate before rates rise much further. Once rates break 6 percent, they may not come back down.
Mortgage markets were volatile last week, making it very difficult to shop for mortgage rates.
A "Housing Start" is a home for which the foundation has been excavated and, considered alongside other key market metrics, September data suggests that the housing market has stabilization is complete. Momentum in housing is overwhelmingly positive: Despite the positive news, the press is calling September's Housing Starts data a "bummer". Citing a drop in monthly building permits, the media purports that housing will slow in the months ahead. The conclusion may be right, but the rationale is may be wrong. The probable cause for fewer permits isn't that the housing market is overdone. It's that home builders are choosing to exercise caution given the pending expiration of the First-Time Home Buyer Tax Credit and a still-growing number of foreclosed homes. It's unclear what housing demand will be beginning in December and the last present a builder wants for the holidays is an excess of inventory. It makes sense that building permits are down, in other words. Looking back at February of this year, there's a host of signs that housing is on the path to recovery. Now, that path won't be a straight line and there's bound to be setbacks, but September's Housing Starts is not one of them. Housing Starts are up 40 percent on the year.
Housing Starts Rise In 8 Months Out Of 9 This Year
Housing Starts on single-family homes gained last month, marking the 8th time that's happened this year.

The new Good Faith Estimate makes its debut January 1, 2010.
Expanded from 1page to 3, the legislators responsible for the new Good Faith Estimate want it to be simpler for homeowners and home buyers to understand than the former version.
By most accounts, Congress will meet this goal.
The new Good Faith Estimate includes plain-English explanations of every fee, charge, and interest payment involved in a purchase or refinance. It also includes a section called "The Shopping Cart" in which applicants can compare lenders.
The new Good Faith Estimate is concise, too. Using a series of "Yes/No" checkboxes on Page 1, mortgage lenders specifically note:
Currently, this information is spread across 3 separate forms.
Furthermore, the new Good Faith Estimate simplifies rate-and-fee comparisons, showing applicants how a lower rate can be available for a higher set of fees, and vice versa.
For all of its clarity, though, the new Good Faith Estimate still fails to address the issue of "suitability". As in, is this the right loan for the right borrower? That's something only a loan officer can do.
For suitable advice, talk with a loan officer who both listens to your needs and helps you plan for them. Great terms on an unsuitable loan are often worse than "good" terms on the right one.
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