Property Investment:What is causing Mortgage Rates to spike and what’s the outlook?

Posted by admin | Real Estate and Property Investing | Thursday 10 March 2011
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Real Estate and Property Investing Strategies that work in today’s market using transactional funding, private money and proof of funds letter to profit with short sales and bank owned properties.Mortgage rates have gone up every single week for last 5 weeks - now up ~.75%. (Get the mortgage rate update in this post). It all started with Fed announcing Quantitative Easing 2. The big question is why so sudden and why so steep! There are several possible reasons:Markets are


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Mortgage rates have gone up every single week for last 5 weeks - now up ~.75%. (Get the mortgage rate update in this post). It all started with Fed announcing Quantitative Easing 2. The big question is why so sudden and why so steep! There are several possible reasons:Markets are increasingly more optimistic that 2011 economic growth will be stronger than what had been expected. Expectations until a couple of weeks ago were for GDP growth in 2011 to be 3.0%, now the consensus is for growth to be at 4.0% and a decline in the unemployment rate from the present 9.8% to 8.7% by the end of 2011.The extension of the Bush tax cuts, the 2.0% cut in workers contribution to social security will put more cash in consumers’ pockets.Also driving rates higher, the end of safety moves generated by issues in Europe and in the US and Congress’s unwillingness to cut federal spending. The 8B tax cut bill now moving through Congress is yet one more Christmas tree filled with earmarks (pork), politicians can’t do anything that doesn’t end up in more unnecessary spending. The fiscal budget bill also moving through Congress is hung with earmarks driven by Democrats and with not a lot of strong resistance from Republicans.Outlook for Mortgage Rates:Since Real Estate recovery is key to overall economic recovery, you might think that the Fed won’t allow the rates to continuously go up. But surprising as it may sound, the Fed doesn’t directly control mortgage rates. Ben Bernanke & Co. directly control the Federal Funds rate — i.e,. the rate at which banks lend to one another on an overnight basis and that serves as a benchmark for short-term credit. But the longer the term of the debt, the less direct control the …

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