This entry was posted on Tuesday, May 13th, 2008 at 9:54 am and is filed under Area Stats, Economy, Mortgage Rates. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
Sacramento Mortgage Rates: The Start of a Recovery?
I just received some statistics on the Sacramento County market that confirm what we in the Sacramento valley have been feeling: buyers have emerged like a dragonfly hatch and are swarming around a veritable feast of low-priced, bank-owned properties. Has Sacramento taken the worst of its lumps?
For April, new escrows rose 33%, and closed escrows skyrocketed by 35% from the previous month and 68% from the same time last year. But the number of new listings fell 30%, reducing the inventory level to 5.9 months from 8.3. To further underscore the market’s keen interest in foreclosures, 90% of April’s sales were under $400k, 85% under $350k. Activity is certainly on the rise. But how deep is the pool of buyers?
Is the Financial Crisis Over?
Lately, Wall Street murmurs suggest that the worst may be over for the financial crisis. This theory has found support in the March and April retail sales numbers. Sales, ex-auto, grew by 0.5% in April, faster that analysts’ expected, on the heels of a 0.4% gain in March. This week’s CPI figures will give further clues as to impending threat of inflation and whether the Fed will soon have to begin reversing the direction of interest rates.
However, there is a big question about whether the financial dislocation will disrupt employment, further reducing consumer spending at the same time that “import inflation” is redirecting consumer dollars from luxuries to necessities. Mohamed El-Erian from Pimco makes this point is his excellent article Why This Crisis Is Still Far From Finished.
As far as mortgage rates are concerned, don’t bet on lower rates any time soon. The “Treasury bubble” will certainly burst if investors begin to feel like the storm has passed. But if the economy gets worse, mortgage rates will remain high to keep MBS investors in the game. Keep your seatbelt fastened; it’s going to be a bumpy ride.




June 5th, 2008 at 9:38 am
I am hearing about increased sales in markets like Phoenix and Vegas, but with declining prices. Is that a sign of the beginning of a recovery? I am also reading a lot or articles saying that the housing crisis is over or almost over. Lots of confliciting informaion out there…