The Home Loan Mortgage Blog

Weekly Update - 12/3/21

December 3rd, 2021 3:01 PM by T. Fanning

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Hey, happy Friday!

 

We now serve the state of Florida! Let me know if I can be of any help with any buyers/borrowers in either Colorado or Florida!

 

Even though the Feds have started tapering the purchase of mortgage backed securities and Treasuries, fears of the new Covid variant and possible negative economic effects pushed rates lower. Next week has only one economic report that we really need to be concerned with and it comes Friday. The other reports are not likely to heavily influence the markets. We also will have a couple of Treasury auctions that may affect rates during afternoon trading midweek.*

 

We offer Conventional, FHA, VA, USDA, Jumbo and regular construction financing. Some of our niches include: Chenoa Fund loans; FHA and VA 1x Close Construction-Perm; 1.50% Down FHA Advantage Program; CHFA Financing; HomeStyle renovation program; and a Jumbo, 5% down program. We also can do hobby farms, Ag properties and Alt-A (stated income, verified assets for self-employed borrowers)! To see a detailed list of programs, visit our website: www.homeloanmortgageco.com/mortgageprograms

 

As always, please let me know if I can help you, your friends/family/potential buyers/borrowers!


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Last Updated: 12/3/21

 

Friday's bond market has opened down slightly following mixed results from today's major economic report. Stocks are showing early losses with the Dow down 152 points and the Nasdaq down 251 points. The bond market is currently down 2/32 (1.45%), which with yesterday's midday weakness should cause an increase of approximately .125 of a discount point in this morning's mortgage rates if compared to Thursday's morning pricing.

 

The first of today's two relevant economic reports was November's Employment report at 8:30 AM ET. It revealed that the unemployment rate fell to 4.2% from 4.6% in October when forecasts were calling for 4.5%. This was the lowest rate since February 2020 and is the bad news in the report.

 

Favorable news came in the payroll number that showed only 210,000 jobs were added back to the economy last month when over 525,000 were expected. That is a significant miss from expectations and raises concerns about the employment sector going forward. However, there were upward revisions to October and September that added 82,000 more jobs to this year's count than previously thought. In other words, the headline number of 210,000 is very good news, but the revisions seem to offset it in terms of market reaction.

 

A clear piece of good news without negative revisions to muddy the water was average hourly earnings that signal wage inflation pressures. Today's report showed that earnings rose only 0.3% last month when it was predicted to rise 0.4%. Furthermore, year over year readings came in lower than thought. While they are still strong and indicate wage pressures, because they were softer than expected they can be labeled good news for bonds and mortgage rates.

 

The second report of the morning came from the Commerce Department, who announced a 1.0% rise in new orders for durable and non-durable goods. This was much stronger than expected, giving us a sign of manufacturing sector strength. Fortunately, this is not considered to be a highly important report, preventing much of a reaction to the data.

 

Next week has only one economic report that we really need to be concerned with and it comes Friday. The other reports are not likely to heavily influence the markets. We also will have a couple of Treasury auctions that may affect rates during afternoon trading midweek. Look for details on all of next week's activities in Sunday evening's weekly preview.

 

If I were considering financing/refinancing a home, I would....


Lock if my closing were taking place within 7 days...
Lock if my closing were taking place between 8 and 20 days...
Lock if my closing were taking place between 21 and 60 days...
Float if my closing were taking place over 60 days from now...


 This is only my opinion of what I would do if I was financing a home. It is only an opinion and cannot be guaranteed to be in the best interest of all/any other borrowers.
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*http://www.hlmcolorado.com/DailyRateAdvisory
           

Company NMLS ID: 479289 | LO NMLS: 208694

CO License: 100008854

FL Company License: MBR4416 | FL License: LO89221

 

Regulated by the Colorado Division of Real Estate

www.nmlsconsumeraccess.org

Posted by T. Fanning on December 3rd, 2021 3:01 PM

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