Sep. 25, 2008 - Tight Mortgage Credit Curtails Sales Activity
I came acros a recent report from the National Association of Realtors regarding the slowing down of existing home sales that I thought was interesting. Existing-home sales were down in August following a healthy gain in July as tight mortgage credit curtailed activity.
Sales rose in the Midwest and South but fell in the Northeast and West. Nationally, existing-home sales -- including single-family, townhomes, condominiums and co-ops -- declined 2.2 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.91 million units in August from an upwardly revised pace of 5.02 million in July. “The difficulty in obtaining a mortgage increased over the past couple months, making it more challenging for creditworthy borrowers to find financing,” said NAR President Richard F. Gaylord, adding the pendulum in the mortgage market has swung too far. “Our hope is that overly tight lending criteria can be loosened with reasonable standards and credit so that sales activity can catch up with demand. Interest rates have already declined, but there is a serious question as to whether a cash infusion by the U.S. Treasury into Wall Street would help consumers by improving mortgage funding. “We urge Congress to restore access to sound mortgage credit so people have the ability to make and keep a long-term investment in the American dream of homeownership. Congress needs to take care of Main Street and not just bail out Wall Street.”
According to Freddie Mac, the national average commitment rate for a 30-year, conventional, fixed-rate mortgage rose to 6.48 percent in August from 6.43 percent in July; the rate was 6.57 percent in August 2007. However, as of late September, the 30-year fixed had dropped to 5.78 percent, the report said. With the recent crisis the mortgage industry is in, it will be an interesting year ahead no doubt.
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