The continuing fall of the 30 year rate is good news for the national real estate market which is in the midst of a lukewarm recovery. The 5 year arm is seeing more activity now that it is significantly lower than the 30 year arm. Personally I still would heavily favor the 30 year arm with the possibility of seeing double digit interest rates in 5 years because of heavy government spending. The 1 year arm since moving above the 5 year arm has moved into no mans land with there being virtually no reason to get a 1 year arm at this point in time. Below are rates for the last few weeks.
Sep 10, 2009 30-yr 5.07 15-yr 4.50 5-yr ARM 4.51 1-yr ARM 4.64
Sep 03, 2009 30-yr 5.08 15-yr 4.54 5-yr ARM 4.59 1-yr ARM 4.62
Aug 27, 2009 30-yr 5.14 15-yr 4.58 5-yr ARM 4.67 1-yr ARM 4.69
Aug 20, 2009 30-yr 5.12 15-yr 4.56 5-yr ARM 4.57 1-yr ARM 4.69
Aug 13, 2009 30-yr 5.29 15-yr 4.68 5-yr ARM 4.75 1-yr ARM 4.72
Feb 05, 2009 30-yr 5.25 15-yr 4.92 5-yr ARM 5.26 1-yr ARM 4.92
In addition to rates we like to look at actual mortgage payments to gain some more perspective on mortgage rate changes. Based on current mortgage rates we determined the mortgage payment for a 200k loan. We did the same thing with rates from 2 weeks ago and rates from 6 months ago.
Sep 10 30-yr $1082.21 15-yr $1529.98 5-yr ARM $1014.55 1-yr ARM $1030.07
Aug 27 30-yr $1090.82 15-yr $1538.17 5-yr ARM $1033.67 1-yr ARM $1036.07
Jan 29 30-yr $1085.89 15-yr $1560.82 5-yr ARM $1106.88 1-yr ARM $1061.45
Compared to 6 months ago the mortgage payment on a 200k loan is pretty much identical. The payment is $3.68 less a month or a third of one percent.
The real question of course is where mortgage rates are going. There are a few schools of thought. The first is that mortgage rates are going to skyrocket along with inflation caused by the massive government spending over the last few years. There is another school of that that mortgage rates should rise but only slightly and that massive inflation will be curbed by the Federal Reserve.
Either way no one is advocating that mortgage rates are going to fall much further. Therefore my advice would be to look at 30 year rates and to avoid 5 and 1 year arms like the plague. If the first school of thought is correct and mortgage rates rise they will probably not move dramatically until the economy recovers.
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