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Sheila Smith Real Estate Group

Sheila Smith Real Estate Group

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Window of opportunity – don’t miss it. It’s going to disappear quickly

August 9, 2022

There is a window of opportunity for home buyers right now that is most likely going to be VERY short lived.  

This window has mortgage interest rates that have dropped below 5% at the same time that we have a much softer housing market both nationally and here in the Boise area. 

Locally, demand for housing has dropped off and the number of homes currently on the market has increased. The inventory of homes for sale currently is only something that home buyers dreamed about several months ago.  

The window combining the two won’t be here long because the Fed has already announced further rate hikes in the midst of attempting to slow the worst inflation in over 40 years.  Mortgage rates unfortunately will soon be heading back up. So if you are considering a home purchase, now is the time to take action.

According to The Wall Street Journal:

“Mortgage rates dropped to their lowest level since April, offering a reprieve to prospective home buyers who have been hit this year with higher rates and surging prices.

The average rate on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage is 4.99% this week, down from 5.30% a week earlier, according to a survey by mortgage giant Freddie Mac published Thursday. Though rates remain well above their levels from a year ago, they have fallen swiftly in recent weeks from their 13-year high of 5.81% in June.

Mortgage rates and other measures of the cost of borrowing tend to rise and fall with expectations about the trajectory of the economy. Recently, fears that the U.S. is heading into a downturn have lowered expectations of the pace of rate rises.

Until the past few weeks, rising mortgage rates had been a key factor driving up the cost of home buying this year, adding hundreds of dollars or more to buyers’ monthly payments. That, on top of double-digit home-price growth, has helped drive buyers out of the market in recent months.

Sales of previously owned homes fell for a fifth straight month in June, according to the most recent data from the National Association of Realtors.

Elevated mortgage rates are one of the most direct effects on consumers from the Federal Reserve’s campaign to combat inflation. The central bank lifted its key policy rate by 0.75 percentage point last month, its second straight increase of that size, putting the benchmark policy rate in a range between 2.25% and 2.5%.

Those rates drive up borrowing costs for both companies and everyday Americans, making the cost of financing big-ticket purchases more expensive. While the Fed’s interest-rate increases are aimed in part at capping recent surges in the cost of housing, higher mortgage rates make it unlikely that prospective buyers who are using mortgages will get a bargain.

Mortgage rates are tied closely to the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield, which tends to move in tandem with expectations for the Fed’s benchmark rate. On Monday, the 10-year yield slipped to its lowest level since April. It rose Tuesday and Wednesday.

Still, rapid changes in mortgage rates are likely to continue as economists debate whether to be more concerned about inflation or a recession.

The high uncertainty surrounding inflation and other factors will likely cause rates to remain variable, especially as the Federal Reserve attempts to navigate the current economic environment,” said Sam Khater, Freddie Mac’s chief economist, in a statement.”

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Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Boise Housing, Housing Inventory, Housing Market

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