Mortgage applications went down when the 30-year rate went back to its high point in the summer.
A group of mortgage bankers say the 30-year rate has been going up for four weeks in a row and is now at its highest level since July.
The price went up because the bond market was unstable, people were worried about the result of the election, and no one knew what the Federal Reserve would do at its next meeting regarding its interest-rate policy.
The market composite index, which shows the number of mortgage applications, showed less action last week because of all the worry. This was reported by the MBA on Wednesday.
The market measure went down 0.1% from the previous week to 214.5 for the week ending October 25. The number was 161.8 a year ago.
To sum up, the purchase index, which tracks bank applications for buying a home, went up 5% from the previous week.
But the number of purchase apps went up because of technical issues, not because more people wanted to buy. The week of October 14 was a government holiday because it was Columbus Day. Last week was a full week, so there were more applications.
The score for refinancing went down by 6.3%.
All mortgage rates went up.
For the week ending Oct. 25, the average rate on a 30-year mortgage for homes that sold for $766,550 or less was 6.73%. That’s 21 basis points more than the week before.
The rate for jumbo loans, which are 30-year mortgages for homes that sold for more than $766,550, was 6.77%, which is 4 basis points higher than the week before.
The average interest rate on an FHA-backed 30-year mortgage was 6.55%, which is 26 basis points less than the week before.
It went up 29 basis points from the week before to 6.27% on the 15-year.
It went up 8 basis points from the week before to 6.2% for 5-year adjustable-rate mortgages.
In short, mortgage rates are still changing a lot before two big events next week: the election for president and the Fed meeting.
The current state of doubt is likely to last until the Federal Reserve makes it clearer how it plans to move forward with interest rate cuts.
What the MBA said: “After a brief burst of activity in September when rates were almost 60 basis points lower, overall applications have declined 27%, driven by a pullback in refinances,” Joel Kan, deputy chief economist at the MBA, said in a statement.
With regards to home buyers, “we continue to expect housing demand from younger homebuyers to support purchase growth over the next few years as for-sale inventory loosens gradually,” he added.