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Posts Tagged ‘ rates

Rumors: New Homebuyer Tax Credit 2.0

What is it about making sequels to bad movies? You have to agree, it’s one thing to remake an old movie, or make a sequel/prequel to a good movie, but there is nothing worse than sequels to movies that were junk to begin with.

So, when I heard a few higher-ups in HUD and the Obama administration floating the idea of a second home-buyer tax credit, I was understandably surprised. Considering that the first credit showed little to no measurable positive effect (especially in retrospect) and may be responsible for the recent record lows in new and existing home sales, you would think that we had learned our lesson about these types of interventions.

Now look, I’m all for stimulating home buying, but I think we are getting into “Honey, I Shrunk the Baby” territory here. This is, at this point, rumor – but if you will bear with a bit of speculation, but I have to agree with our friends over at Calculated Risk – the best thing for housing would be for our administration to definitively say “There will be no more Housing Tax Credits”. In a market with this much volatility, we need our leadership to help this market stabilize before we can grow. The financial doctors on Wall Street and in DC are ignoring the heart attack and treating the arm pain – as any good doctor will tell you, you fix the problem first and deal with the symptoms second, and you never give a junkie a prescription for drugs.

Any other failed government policies that you think need a sequel? Or perhaps some ideas of how the government can be helpful to the market?

Edit: Calculated Risk found this CNBC report from Diana Olick: HUD now says that “there are no discussions underway to revive the credit.”

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Have a question or something to add? Leave a comment or send us an email

Geoff Boyd – PrimeLending – Clackamas, OR

FOMC (Federal Open Market Committee) Decision on Rates and Purchasing Securities

The market has been holding its breath all day, waiting for the FOMC (Federal Open Market Committee) decision on (among other things) what rates will look like in the near future.

On the political side of things, there has been a lot of pressure on the Fed to start using the income from their investment in Mortgage Backed Securities, and other investments, to pay down our national debt. The big debate has been “is it more important to reduce the national debt or to stimulate growth through various spending programs?” You know the old adage….it’s takes money to make money. Well, there’s a another one that says “a penny saved is a penny earned”. So, today , in the “battle of the old sayings” the former seems to be winning.

The FOMC statement said, basically, that the Fed Funds rate would go unchanged (at 0%-0.25%). In addition, the Fed has come out in support of reinvesting their investment income into more Treasuries. So far, they have not committed to purchasing more MBS. The reason for the increased purchase of treasuries is simple: There is a significant lack of confidence in our economy to sustain its own growth. Consumers are hurting and not spending. This is why I discussed the significance of the personal savings rate in a previous post. Also, the unemployment figures are not getting better, and won’t until employers gain enough confidence to hire. As expected, the FOMC statement included the infamous phrase that they “expect interest rates to stay low for an extended period of time”

After the FOMC Decision, we saw a quick spike in the market, but now that is backing off as the market digests the news and the implications. Looking at the vote, it was 9 to 1 vote with Hoenig dissenting.

If you are trying to game this to your advantage, there are some good money-making opportunities right now, but the market is quite volatile right now. Our suggestion? Give it some time to see where things are when the dust settles.

Read the full statement here.

The Good, The Bad and The Ugly – Your Market Update for July 1st, 2010

Market News for Mortgage Topics

Here are some great links to get you started.

Housing Market Data for Portland, OR

Barry Riholtz (The Big Picture) Interviewed about the Housing Market

House and Senate Pass Unemployment / Homebuyer Tax Credit Extension

Pending Home Sales drop 30% month-over-month

This is about as good (bad?) as it gets, folks.

Rates are back to all-time lows today. The recent dip in stocks has helped drive Mortgage Bond buying, even at rates that would have been laughed at 5 years ago. Don’t expect rates to move much further down, because we can already see diminishing returns setting in. If you have been waiting for the right time to buy and you are positioned to make that leap, now is the right time. The housing market is full of opportunity for buyers, many people are (almost) literally giving away their homes through short sales and even banks are looking at ways to get rid of their foreclosed-upon REO properties.

One of the classic indicators for mortgage rates are treasury bond prices. At these low levels, we see how shaky those ties are, as treasury bonds are still being pushed higher on international and domestic concerns, while mortgage rates seem to have bottomed out.

Holden Lewis over at Bankrate wrote today in his Blog that the Bankrate Rate Survey showed an all-new low for rates.  Check out that article (and some shameless promotion of his Twitter account) here.

Do you Feel Stimulated Yet?

We are finally getting to see the “real” state of housing, as reports roll in for purchases during May, the first data we’ve had in a while that was not colored by the new homebuyer tax credit – I’ll give you a hint, it’s not pretty.

When Bloomberg News surveyed 36 different economists, they predicted a month-over-month drop of 4% – 25% in pending home sales. If you read through the links above, you know that the actual drop in pending home sales was 30% – which shows that, even this far into the recession, the calculations that economists use are fairly worthless is predicting reality.

I’m seriously considering writing a book entitled “accurately predicting economic factors in a recession” – it would only be 1 page, and that page would say “keep calculating until you get a negative result, and then double that negative result”.

The long-term effects of the homebuyer tax credit are as-of-yet unknown, but we do know that it has not been a magic bullet for the housing market, and that it has been an excellent source of income for inmates.

Jobs Report Due Tomorrow – Do we even want to know?

Here are the basics. Earlier this week, ADP released their National Employment Report for June, which showed a gain of 13k, much less than the estimate of 61k or May’s 57k gain. Today we see that jobless claims are up to 472k, again worse than estimates and worse than the previous months number.

So, the best data we have shows that we lost about 250,000 jobs from the first phase of the census operation ending. The government will continue to employ a skeleton crew of census workers to complete wrap-up operations, but for most areas, the initial push (and most of the jobs) has ended. This means that to break even, we need to have created a quarter of a million jobs. Its not going to happen.

But, how much are we going to miss? The general consensus that I’ve seen (which is optimistic in my opinion) is only 100k-130k jobs lost. That means that 120k-150k jobs were created to “soak up” some of the census losses. Can we be pleasantly surprised tomorrow morning? Sure we can; its entirely possible that a bunch of phantom jobs will swoop in and boost the market. More likely, we will get a pretty negative report tomorrow and, moving into the weekend, we will hear a lot about double-dipping and economic uncertainty

But where do we go from there?

For the market, we are going into a 3-day weekend. This means a lot of time for sentiment and inertia to build up one way or another. If we go into this weekend after a week of bad news, its likely that we will move into Tuesday riding a wave of uncertainty and see some level of fallout from that.

So, until then, we will cross our fingers that jobs are going to come back and, with them, some sense of stability in the economy.

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Follow us on twitter for current news, advice and market status updates.

Have a question or something to add? Leave a comment or send us an email

Geoff Boyd – PrimeLending – Clackamas, OR