30-year mortgages remain at 6.52 percent (AP)
Freddie Mac, the pledge company, reported Thursday that 30-year, fixed-rate mortgages averaged 6.52 percent this week. That was the same rate as the two previous weeks and represented the second highest rate of the year.
The highest rate so far this year was 6.63 percent hit for the week ending July 24.
Frank Nothaft, paramount economist for Freddie Mac, said 30-year mortgages did not budge because financial markets can’t decide whether the economy is getting weaker or is stabilizing.
He noted that retail sales came in weaker-than-expected for July while call with a view to consumer make no doubt of grew in June by other thing than twice the sum that economists had been expecting.
The nationwide Freddie Mac retrospect showed that other types of mortgages posted small declines this week.
Rates on 15-year, fixed-rate mortgages, a popular choice beneficial to refinancing, fell to 6.07 percent, down from 6.10 percent highest week.
Rates on five-year, adjustable-rate mortgages averaged 6.02 percent this week, down slightly from 6.05 percent last week. Rates steady one-year, adjustable-rate mortgages dipped to 5.18 percent, prostrate from 5.22 percent final week.
The mortgage rates do not include add-on fees known as points. The nationwide average fee for 30-year mortgages and 15-year mortgages was 0.7 question. Five-year mortgages had an average fee of 0.6 point at the same time that one-year mortgages carried some average absolute title of 0.5 point.
A year ago, rates on 30-year mortgages stood at 6.62 percent, 15-year mortgage rates averaged 6.30 percent, five-year adjustable-rate mortgages were at 6.35 percent and one-year adjustable-rate mortgages stood at 5.67 percent.
The housing market continues to struggle with the deepest downturn in decades. Home prices and sales are falling sharply and the glut of unsold homes is ascent as more mortgages go into foreclosure.
California-based Realty Trac Inc. reported Thursday the number of foreclosure filings jumped by the agency of more than 50 percent in July while the National Association of Realtors said median home prices fell in three-fourths of the cities it surveyed in the April-June quarter.
___
On the Net:
Freddie Mac: http://www.freddiemac.com
Original text: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/business/*http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080814/ap_on_bi_ge/mortgage_rates
