Mortgage Center
Brian Parker
Loan Officer
36164 Emerald Coast Pkwy
Destin, FL 32541
850-837-7360
850-803-7661
877-215-4597
Market Update
INFO THAT HITS US WHERE WE LIVE New home
sales fell 11.2% in January to a record low level. Existing home sales weren't very
pretty either, down 7.2%, though they're UP 11.5% over a year ago. Let's remember that last Fall we all thought
the tax credit was going away at the end of November. Many sales got
pushed into October and November, causing sales drops the next two
months. But the median new
home price is down just 2.4% year over year and the average price is
now UP 3.7%. For an existing home, the median price is unchanged from a
year ago and the average price is UP 2.6%. More evidence home
prices are stabilizing, with some analysts expecting modest gains for the
year. Supporting this, the Case-Shiller home
price index was UP 0.3% in December, its seventh straight
monthly rise.
Even more interesting was the news that this has actually been a very
good decade for home prices. From
January 2000 to December 2009, prices were UP 46%, making residential
real estate a clearly profitable investment. And that's not
even factoring in the mortgage interest and real estate tax
deductions homeowners get!
Finally, we've reported that the Fed
will stop buying mortgage bonds at the end of this month and experts
feared rates may edge up. Now analysts
say mortgage rates might not move much at all. This stems from
the fairly calm market reaction to last week's hike of the Fed's discount
lending rate (which is NOT the key Fed funds rate). Seeing little or no move in today's low mortgage
rates is good news for the near term.
>> Review of Last Week
MINOR SLIP... Another volatile week on
Wall Street, as investors drove stock prices down two days, then up two
days, with all three major indexes slipping just slightly for the week.
Things got off to a weak economic start with Consumer Confidence dropping
sharply in February, much like the temporary drop in January 1996 when,
curiously, there was another big blizzard on the East Coast.
Folks didn't much like the drop
in new home sales either, but good news did come with the Richmond
Fed Index, which showed that manufacturing in the mid-Atlantic region
went from -2 in January to +2 in February. Then there was Fed
Chairman Ben Bernanke's monetary policy report to Congress, which he
serves up every six months. Bernanke
assured everyone rates will remain low, a message loved by investors.
The up-and-down news continued with durable
goods UP a solid 3.0% for January, showing business is investing in
equipment, usually a precursor to their investing in jobs. Not
just yet, though, as weekly unemployment claims edged up a tad. Then Friday we had the blockbuster news that real GDP
for Q4 was revised UP to a 5.9% annual growth rate. People who
still can't see a recovery should also look at the Chicago PMI. This gauge of Midwest
manufacturing hit a five-year high of 62.6 for February.
For the week, the Dow was down 0.7%, to 10325.26; the S&P 500 was
down 0.4%, to 1104.49; while the Nasdaq skidded down 0.3%, to 2238.26.
Bonds ended the week pretty nicely as investors sought safety in a week
featuring strong Treasury auctions. The FNMA 30-year 4.5% bond we watch
ended UP 87 basis points, closing at $101.09. As a national average,
mortgage rates inched up a little, but still remain at very low levels.
>> This Week’s Forecast
INFLATION, MANUFACTURING, HOMES, JOBS... This week has everything! We start off with PCE, the Fed's favorite reading on inflation, followed by the ISM take on the state of manufacturing, a sector that's been leading the recovery. Thursday, Pending Home Sales looks to the near future of the housing market. Then the week ends with the all-important February jobs report. We will be looking for some encouraging signs on that front.
