Friday, May 13, 2011

Weekly Mortgage Newsletter

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Mortgage Time
Mortgage Market News for the week ending May 13, 2011

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Compliments of
Philip Jensen
AmeriFirst Financial

PHONE:
(602) 492-8393

Phil@JensenTeam.com

Arizona Mortgage Experts

Phoenix Home Search

Mesa Mortgage Rates

Gilbert Homes for Sale

1910 S. Stapley Dr
Suite 209
Mesa, AZ 852104

  
Events This Week:

Inflation Rose

Jobless Claims Fell

Retail Sales Higher

Manufacturing Mixed


Events Next Week:

Mon 5/16
Empire State

Tues 5/17
Industrial Prod.
Housing Starts

Wed 5/18
FOMC Minutes

Thur 5/19
Existing Sales
Philly Fed
Leading Indicators

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Little Change in Mortgage Rates

It was a volatile week for mortgage rates. Troubles in smaller European nations, mixed results for the Treasury auctions, and tame inflation data caused significant movements in rates during the week. These influences offset each other, though, and mortgage rates ended the week nearly unchanged.

Although the Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation data came in slightly higher than expected on Friday, mortgage rates improved after the news. April CPI increased 3.2% from one year ago, which was the highest annual rate in two and one-half years. Core CPI, which excludes food and energy, increased at a 1.3% annual rate. While Core CPI remained well below the Fed's target range around 2.0%, it was up from 1.2% last month and 0.8% at the end of last year, meaning that the trend has clearly been moving higher.

Inflation is negative for mortgage rates, so the question is why mortgage rates remain at the lowest levels of the year despite rising inflation data. The likely answer is that investors expect that the majority of the increase in inflation has already taken place. Fed officials have maintained that they expect the inflationary effects of higher oil prices to be "transitory", and the recent drop in oil prices has supported the Fed's position. One year ago, oil prices were around $70 per barrel, but they averaged about $110 per barrel in April, an increase of more than 50%. So far in May, oil prices have averaged about $100 per barrel, and investors don't expect that oil prices will rise 50% over the next year. Meanwhile, wage growth, a major factor in inflation levels, has been minimal in recent months. For these reasons, current inflation expectations remain relatively low.

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Also Notable:

  • Weekly Jobless Claims fell sharply from the highest level since August last week
  • April Retail Sales increased 0.5% from March, showing steady improvement
  • Plosser stated that inflation and inflation expectations will determine future Fed policy
  • S&P again downgraded its rating for Greece

Average 30 yr fixed rate:

Last week:

-0.10%

This week:

0.00%

Stocks (weekly):

Dow:

12,700

-50

NASDAQ:

2,850

-25

  

Week Ahead

Next week, Industrial Production, an important indicator of economic growth, will come out on Tuesday. Housing Starts will also be released on Tuesday. The FOMC Minutes from the April 27 Fed meeting will come out on Wednesday. These detailed notes offer additional insight into the Fed's decisions. Existing Home Sales will be released on Thursday. Empire State, Philly Fed, and Leading indicators will round out the schedule.

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Posted via email from philipjensen's posterous

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