U.S. mortgage applications dipped last week, reflecting reduced demand
for home purchase loans even as rates on 30-year loans fell to their
lowest since December, an industry group said on Wednesday. The
Mortgage Bankers Association's (MBA) seasonally adjusted index of
mortgage applications, which includes both purchase and refinance loans,
decreased 1.2 percent for the week ended February 5.
A continuation of lackluster demand for home purchase loans would not
bode well for the U.S. housing market, which remains highly vulnerable
to setbacks and heavily reliant on government intervention.
The four-week moving average of mortgage applications, which smooths the
volatile weekly figures, was up 3.8 percent.
With the four week average up and the inventory of homes for sale
declining, one would think prices would be on the rise. But Celia Chen,
senior director of housing economics at Moody's Economy.com in West
Chester, Pennsylvania, said "Home prices will fall, probably until the
end of the year," Chen said. "The large pipeline of distressed
properties that may turn into foreclosure sales weigh down the home
price outlook."
"There is a great deal of uncertainty over how many properties will end
up on the market as a foreclosure sale, however," she said.
The housing market faces plenty of obstacles ahead and we will keep you posted on early signs of changes.
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Rueters
Edited by Paul Nelson







