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What’s Ahead For Mortgage Rates This Week : February 16, 2010

Submitted by on February 16, 2010 – 6:50 AMNo Comment

Housing Starts Jan 2008-Dec 2009Here’s the latest scoop on changes in mortgage rates as provided by Michael Haigh.

Mortgage markets worsened last week on general profit-taking in the U.S. bond market, combined with talk of a coordinated rescue effort for Greece and its debt burden. Mortgage-backed bonds sold off, causing conventional and FHA mortgage rates to rise.

There wasn’t much hard data on which to trade last week, either, so momentum took markets farther than they otherwise might have moved on their own.  It marked the first time in 5 weeks that rates rose for rate shoppers.

This week, data returns. Expect mortgage market movement.

Some of the week’s more important releases include:

  1. Housing Starts and Building Permits (Wednesday)
  2. The release of the last month’s FOMC Minutes (Wednesday)
  3. Business and consumer inflation figures (Thursday and Friday)

Inclement weather may have impacted last month’s Housing Starts reading so pay closer attention to Building Permits.  Permits precede actual construction and can be more indicative of economic optimism. If permit readings are strong, it should be a negative for mortgage rates.

The same is true for the FOMC Minutes.

Last month’s FOMC post-meeting press-release was decidedly middle-of-the-road, but the statement is just a summary of the Fed’s 2-day meeting, boiled down to a few paragraphs.  Wednesday’s release of the FOMC Minutes will reveal the deeper discussions among members of the Fed.  Wall Street will mine it for clues about the future of the economy.

If Wall Street senses optimism coming from the Fed — again — mortgage rates should rise.

And, lastly, keep an eye on Thursday and Friday’s inflation data.  Inflation is bad for mortgage rates so a higher-than-expected reading should spark a bond market sell-off.

Since mid-December, mortgage rates have moved within a tight range and there’s little reason for rates will break this range this week. However, we are near the top of the channel. If you know you’re going to need a rate locked soon, it’s probably best to do early in the week.

Related posts:

  1. What’s Ahead For Mortgage Rates This Week : February 8, 2010
  2. The January 2010 Jobs Report May Lead Mortgage Rates And Home Prices Higher
  3. 7 Ways To Protect Your Credit Score For Better Mortgage Rates

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