Arizona Real Estate News Access
All the real estate and mortgage news you need to know in Arizona
Categories:

Archives:
Meta:
March 2024
S M T W T F S
« Oct    
 12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930
31  
03/25/09
Home-price skid slowed in January
Filed under: General, Real Estate
Posted by: Lillian Wong @ 11:01 am

Wire Reports

U.S. home prices fell 6.3 percent in January from the same month last year, according to a U.S. government report.

However, at the same time, The Federal Housing Finance Agency said prices, on a seasonally adjusted basis, rose 1.7 percent from December to January. Changes in the geographic mix of sales explained the unexpected monthly increase. Home sales included in January’s data were weighted toward areas that haven’t borne as much of the brunt of the housing recession, the agency said.

The index is calculated using mortgage loans bought or guaranteed by federally controlled mortgage-finance companies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. It is down 9.6 percent from its peak in April 2007.  

The home-price decline was led by a 21 percent price drop in the Western region, which includes California, the Federal Housing Finance Agency in Washington said Tuesday.

But the pace of home-price declines is slowing as cheaper financing lured buyers and helped offset foreclosure sales. A wave of refinancing is likely to boost home-loan originations by $800 billion to $2.78 trillion, the Mortgage Bankers Association said Tuesday. Refinancing will total $1.96 trillion in 2009 and purchase originations will increase to $821 billion, the group said, as the Federal Reserve buys mortgage-backed securities.

The effect of having the Fed bid in the market is enough to create a refinance incentive for a tremendous number of homeowners, said Jay Brinkmann, MBAs chief economist. The vast majority of mortgages originated before the latter part of 2008 are probably going to have at least a 50 basis point refinance incentive for at least the next several months, with mortgage rates hitting lows not seen since the early 1950s and late 1940s.

Leave a Reply