Antelope Valley Press

Long-term US mortgage unchanged again this week

- By MATT OTT AP Business Writer

WASHINGTON — Average long-term US mortgage rates were flat for a third straight week after rising about a half percent early in the year.

The average rate on the 30-year loan held at 3.55% from last week, mortgage buyer Freddie Mac reported, Thursday. It stood at 2.73% a year ago.

The average rate on 15-year, fixed-rate mortgages, popular among those refinancin­g their homes, fell to 2.77% from 2.80% last week. One year ago, the rate was 2.21%.

Though they remain historical­ly low, home loan rates have been rising to levels not seen since early 2020, when the Coronaviru­s pandemic was breaking in the US.

Last week, the Fed signaled that it would begin a series of interest rate hikes in March, reversing pandemic-era policies that have fueled hiring and growth but also adding to inflation levels not seen in some 40 years.

Earlier this month, the government reported that inflation spiked to 7% in December from a year earlier, the sharpest increase in four decades. In addition, the Labor Department reported that prices at the wholesale level surged by a record 9.7% last month from December 2020.

The Fed’s upcoming rate hike — or hikes — will make it more expensive to borrow for a home, car or business.

Also Thursday, the government reported that applicatio­ns for unemployme­nt benefits fell for the second week in a row after three straight weeks of increases that economists blamed on the surging Omicron variant of COVID-19.

The Commerce Department reported last week that the nation’s gross domestic product — its total output of goods and services — expanded 5.7% in 2021, the strongest calendar-year growth since a 7.2% surge in 1984. In the fourth quarter, the economy grew at an unexpected­ly brisk 6.9% annual pace.

Available housing has been hard to come by since long before the pandemic started, and rising prices are making it even harder for homebuyers to secure a new home. Economists expect rising interest rates to add to house hunters’ dismay.

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