Houston Chronicle Sunday

Don’t panic about rising rates

- By Holden Lewis

Should I panic over rising interest rates?

No.

Mortgage rates zoomed in the last quarter of 2016, with the 30-year fixed ending the year at 4.32 percent. It rose more than three-quarters of a percentage point in the final three months of the year. Let’s put this in perspectiv­e.

• Bankrate has surveyed mortgage rates every Wednesday since Sept. 25, 1985.

The 30-year fixed was 12.31 percent that first week, and that’s the highest it’s been.

• As far as I can tell, mortgage rates had never been less than 4 percent until then.

In an appendix to an obscure research paper from 1956, I found evidence that you could get a 4 percent mortgage in Chicago more than a century ago.

Mortgage rates rose as part of a sell-off in bond markets.

According to convention­al wisdom, investors dumped their bonds after the presidenti­al election because they believe that Donald Trump will raise infrastruc­ture spending and cut taxes.

“With Trump getting in, that brings in a lot of inflation fears and uncertaint­y that cause rates to go up,” says Brian Koss, executive vice president of Mortgage Network.

When investors sold bonds, mortgage rates went up.

Those investors were jumping to conclusion­s. I’m not saying they’re wrong; I’m saying it’s too soon to know if they’re right.

What it means for housing

The law of supply and demand doesn’t have an iron grip on housing. A lot of people buy their first homes when they start families. No one checks house prices and mortgage rates when deciding whether and when to have children.

“The lead-up to the election had no impact on home sales or demand; pent-up demand, historical­ly low mortgage rates, relatively strong job creation and significan­t demographi­c tailwinds created the best real estate market in a decade,” said Jonathan Smoke, chief economist for Realtor.com.

Elizabeth Rose, branch manager for Movement Mortgage in Dallas, said: “I don’t think this is bad news for housing at all. We can look back on history and see that people buy houses no matter what the interest rates are.”

She acknowledg­es that mortgage rates might affect some people’s ability to buy. But, determined home buyers will simply choose smaller houses or longer commutes in exchange for lower house prices.

A lot of buyers won’t even have to do that. Mortgage rates are in the 4 percent range.

That’s still low, and this rate increase doesn’t affect affordabil­ity much.

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