« First « Previous Comments 18 - 39 of 39 Search these comments
You can keep a deflating tire from going flat by continually pumping it up with air, but the leak will invariably get too big and you can't pump as fast as necessary. You'll probably be too tired and don't have any energy left to pump. At that point the tire is going to go flat and you can't stop it.
Oh, wait, scratch that. I capitulated two days ago.
Roberto Professor. Your investments are in good shape so no worries oh great one. However, despite your exceptional brain and analysis, I suspect even you are getting concerned about the pace and commentary of recent events. What else, aside from your massive ego, would explain the frequency and turnaround of your Pat Net posts?
Rates may eventually make a difference, but today, it is SUPPLY AND DEMAND. nothing else matters, today.
Rates will influence supply and demand...
AZ, using a $200K home for example, 20% down, $1500 tax, $700 insurance:
4%
payment = $955.53
5% payment = $1050.58
A $100 will make a huge difference because people have so much other debt to pay off. There are car loans, student loans, credit card debt. Every $100 more on the mortgage will limit who can afford the payment. New rules starting in June will exclude anyone paying more than 43% of their income on a mortgage.
A $100 will make a huge difference because people have so much other debt to pay off. There are car loans, student loans, credit card debt. Every $100 more on the mortgage will limit who can afford the payment. New rules starting in June will exclude anyone paying more than 43% of their income on a mortgage.
In the current market, a $100 difference is barely even noise to qualified buyers. Inventories are extremely low and the only people that can afford to buy are either:
a) Paying cash so they don't give a damn what interest rates are
b) VERY well qualified buyers taking conventional loans
With inventories being at 20% of the historic norm, that means that only the top 20% of buyers can play (as in, the bottom 80% is irrelevant). The top 20% may well have car loans and CC debt, but it is not enough to disqualify them from conventional financing like it is for the majority of Americans. That is the case NOW. Of course, inventories will eventually rise again and lending standards will probably become more lax, but that's not happening today.
For conventional financing, I am pretty sure that the max DTI was already 43%. Wells Fargo clearly stated so when we got our loan through them this month. Lending standards have been tight enough to disqualify MOST buyers for years now, and we've all seen how crazy the market has gone anyway.
Now, add in that 30% of the purchases are cash, so you are only affecting the other 70% anyways.
The reason why 30% of the purchases are cash is that the rates are so low in other asset classes. If rates rises (I don't think they will), cash purchases will decrease substantially.
Let me do the math for you. If someone can make 5% on a bond fund, $200,000 gives them $10,000 of income without any expenses. The $200,000
house makes ($1200 rent X 12 months)*0.9 (10% management fee) -$1500 property tax = $11450 and that does not include any fixes and depreciation. I would put my money in a bond fund.
Rates matter.
Roberto, what you are saying doesn't make any sense. Let me tell you how the 0.5% rate increase is affecting my house search. We have stopped looking at homes in the range of $800-850k because of that "small" increase. As a percentage of the interest portion of the mortgage payment, a 0.5/3.5 increase in rates is a 14% increase in interest!
Unless we choose to put more down, we are looking at a huge increase in monthly costs. Like everyone else we have other monthly bills that dictate our housing spending limit. All across the country, a super majority of buyers (70%) are doing this same calculation and arriving at a similar conclusion.
As for cash buyers, rising interest rates make cash buying more expensive too. There is a cash equivalency to every payment stream. I had 1yr CDs paying 5.7% in 2008 (thanks Countrywide). Now I'd be lucky to get 1%. The value of cash has fallen even more dramatically than rates! In terms of risk free income, cash is worth less than 20% what it was 5 years ago. If nominal 1yr CD rates double from 1 to 2% the value of the cash doubles. This makes buying with cash that much more expensive, thus depressing the amount buyers are willing to spend.
Think about it this way: if I am buying a house for $1M in cash, I am foregoing only %10k in annual income. If rates are paying 5%, then I am foregoing $50k in income. What is the difference in comparable rental property quality when you are paying $833/mo. vs $4167/mo.? Rates matter to everyone -- to the cash rich as well as the cash poor.
Interest rates will remain calm for the foreseeable future. I mean with the top 5% skimming off virtually every dime off the top and real incomes of the 95% that continue to fall, inflation is simply a quaint memory. I mean, the rich can only consume so many potatoes. Unless of course they decide to buy all of them to let them rot. Deflation is the boogyman that everyone should really be afraid of.....and those holding the bags full of money are. I predict rates well under 6% for the rest of my life.
I predict rates well under 6% for the rest of my life.
You must be at least 89 to 92 years old.
Kidding aside, I'm afraid your prediction has a very high chance of becoming reality.
@SFace,
At this point, it looks like 2013 is the reverse of 2012. 2012 started slow and picked up a lot of steam going into the summer and the rest of the year. This year started with a bang right out of the gate so I wouldn't be surprised to see a much tamer market in the 2nd half of the year. This fall and winter will likely be a buyer's market again in my opinion.
My conspiracy theory is that the Fed wants higher rates here to try to cool down the stock market bubble. Also, to allow the banks to gouge the homebuyers who plan on buying before school gets back in session. They are going to buy no matter what so may as well skim a few extra dollars out of them. Then later in the year the Fed will let rates come back down. They will suggest more QE is coming. Or allow unemployment numbers to go back up. Anyways, the Fed will never raise rates substantially again. They will just lie about the real figures and try to jawbone the markets to go the way they currently want it to. Rates start edging up and they say things are getting worse(which brings rates down). Things start heating up and they suggest tapering...
Going by fundamentals rates should be much higher. If we used the same inflation calculation we used when Carter was president, inflation would be reported as being in the double digits today. The Fed would have to raise rates in kind, which is why they lie about the real rate. We also have numerous bubbles all over. Sorry, but 30% annual increases in real estate is not typical. Neither is a 150% rise in stock markets when conditions are worse than traders ever imagined they could get. A deficit and tripling of the money supply should not allow low rates either. Again, the Fed can't allow rates to go to their natural levels. They need them to be in a limited range. Maybe the bond vigilantes will come out of their coma? If not, expect rates between 2% and 5% for decades(or until we get some politicians who allow free markets and deal with our deficit).....
Back when I closed in May 2011, the rates were 5%.
And when I closed in October 2010 the rate had JUST dropped to 3.75%, since then the rate continued to drop and I felt like I missed out ... well, not really, but I'm feeling a warm fuzzy as the rates move above what I'm paying.
It's funny to hear people say a 4% 30 year fixed mortgage is a CATASTROPHE. Jezuz get some perspective people. In the 80s and 90s and early 2000s (pre 9/11) people would have given up their first born for a 4% mortgage. Rates were in the 8% range in 2000.
And now 4% is a CATASTROPHE? Give me a break.
It's funny to hear people say a 4% 30 year fixed mortgage is a CATASTROPHE.
The article specified the change in interest rate as being historically significant, but I agree that calling anything a catastrophe is funny.
What's really funny is that people think the interest rate is significant. What's important is the total amount of interest you will pay compared with the total amount of money you will make.
What a brilliant move to get people obsessed about their monthly payments. What a bunch of good, submissively willing workers.
When you're trying to qualify for an over-priced house at 44% of your gross
income it is.... every 0.1% makes a difference...
Going in with 44% gross ratio is rather dangerous regardless of interest rates - if you are in a 2 income family, if 1 person gets whacked, you are in serious trouble, the only way out of that predicament is to have at least 6 months worth of savings and try to sell asap (or find another job). If the loss of the job were to occur within 3 years or less of buying and selling becomes necessary a substantial loss compared to renting is likely to occur.
My conspiracy theory is that the Fed wants higher rates here to try to cool down the stock market bubble.
I can't imagine why anyone 18T in debt would want higher interest rates.
Mortgage Purchase Applications are at mid-90s levels.
Better find more investors...
What's really funny is that people think the interest rate is significant.
What's important is the total amount of interest you will pay compared with the
total amount of money you will make.
Whether you look at it on a monthly basis or a total cost basis, the interest rate has a HUGE effect on the total amount of interest you will pay, so I'd say it's pretty significant.
And if you want to do a rent vs. buy calculation, it is easiest to look at it on a montly basis as that is how most people pay their rent.
the interest rate has a HUGE effect on the total amount of interest you will pay
Completely agree. I tried and failed to write the point that considering the monthly bill without considering the 30 year bill can lead to decisions difficult to live-up to.
there is zero chance you are paying the same rent 30 years from now either. Look at your total rent over 30 years too then, if that helps.
It helps! Totally agree. My main problem with buying a house is that it takes a lot of time/money away from me now that could be used to grow over time.
I also don't want to live in Phoenix. I really enjoy San Francisco. Maybe someday I'll Winter in Tucson due to family ties.
There is no adequately descriptive language for movement in Mortgage rates today. "Vaulting catastrophically higher" only begins to capture the brutality of the movement. Until today, December 7th 2010 had been the largest day-over-day increase in 30yr rates that we'd logged since 'Black Wednesday'--which was essentially the worst day for mortgage markets in the post-meltdown era (it's a bit chilling to consider the date was 5/27/2009). Today's move is about 50% larger than December's and right in line with Black Wednesday. The conventional 30yr fixed rate with the most efficient combination of cost and payment for a perfect scenario (best-execution) skipped completely past 3.875% and moved soundly into 4.0%. Many lenders are already at 4.125% or higher, but almost all of them moved higher by surprisingly similar amounts (given the size of the move).
http://www.mortgagenewsdaily.com/consumer_rates/310426.aspx
#housing