What is mortgage loan modification, and is it a good idea?
Loan modification helps borrowers who can’t pay their mortgage due to financial hardship. Learn more about a loan modification vs. refinance.
Loan modification helps borrowers who can’t pay their mortgage due to financial hardship. Learn more about a loan modification vs. refinance.
Posted To: Mortgage Rate Watch
Volatility has returned to the mortgage market in grand fashion this week with many lenders quoting rates that are as much as a quarter of a point higher than they were last week. That means if you were looking at something in the 2.75% neighborhood on Friday, it could be 3.0% today. What gives? The upward pressure is nothing new , really. It has existed in the broader bond market since August, but only recently began spilling over to the mortgage market. We’ve been discussing the increased risks of such a spillover in the event of a sharper bond market move and yesterday brought just such a move. Today was much more docile by comparison, but it didn’t do anything heroic to push back against yesterday’s weakness. Still, there could be some promise of stability in the fact that the bond market…(read more)
30-Year Mortgage Rates | See Today’s 30-Year Fixed Rates The Mortgage Reports
With pandemic conditions in place for a second spring, lenders and brokers discuss the indicators that will reveal whether the market is shifting away from the traditional selling season to one that runs hot throughout the year.
Under the Biden Administration, HUD is expanding the Fair Housing Act to protect LGBTQ individuals. Here’s what that means for renters and home buyers.
Posted To: MBS Commentary
As of Monday, bonds had closed at higher yields for 8 straight days. Such streaks beg for a correction. They rarely last longer. The correction became "official" on Wednesday with a decent 10yr Treasury auction helping to confirm. But even on that same day, we warned that the gains were underwhelming at that these sorts of obvious corrections often happen in the sort of 2-day bursts seen on Tue/Wed. Sure enough, yesterday was red day for bonds and risks rapidly increased that bond sellers would be saying "game on" again. In addition to the Wayne's World scene, the chart above shows a zoomed-in section of the prevailing uptrend (yellow parallel lines containing almost all 10yr movement since August 2020). The most basic implication of the "game on" trading is…(read more)
Mortgage Rates Roughly Unchanged From Last Week Mortgage News Daily
Today’s mortgage and refinance rates Markets were closed yesterday. However, average mortgage rates rose again last Friday. Of course, rises are unwelcome. But these rates remain within their exceptionally low […]
Recovery prospects, renewed focus on stimulus, inflation concerns, a brighter covid outlook, etc… All of these are reasons for an ongoing, gradual trend toward higher rates in 2021 (i.e. general bond market weakness) but none of them really explain why the bond market had its worst day in months today specifically. Still, pundits are pointing to the laundry list of usual suspects to explain the move. In their defense, that’s all anyone can really do on a day like today. At a certain point market momentum becomes its own justification and bond prices snowball to lower and lower levels. When bond prices fall, rates rise–a fact which is abundantly clear in comparing today’s rates to those seen late last week. The average lender is quoting conventional 30yr fixed rates that are roughly 1/8th
Posted To: MND NewsWire
There was a net decline of 1.6 percent in the number of mortgages in forbearance during the past week, a decrease of approximately 48,000 loans, as more plans that had expired at the end of January were processed out of the system. After the number of forborne loans declined by 45,000 the previous week, Black Knight had estimated there were about 47,000 more January expirations pending either removal or a three-month extension of their forbearance term. The company, in its weekly report on COVID-19 forbearances, said the expirations driving the improvements over the past two weeks are of three-month terms. The maximum 12-month period would have begun to hit at the end of March. However, earlier this week the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) announced that borrowers in Fannie Mae and Freddie…(read more)