Mortgage rates moved higher this week despite benchmark Treasury yields being largely unchanged versus one week ago. The tightening grip of the credit crunch means a return to wider mortgage spreads, representing the difference between mortgage rates and the risk-free ten-year Treasury. Although this risk premium had narrowed following the government takeover of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, spreads widened following the defeat of the financial rescue package. Unhappy mortgage shoppers can contact their Congressional representatives.
This year has been a wild ride for mortgage rates, with a low in January of 5.57 percent and a high of 6.77 percent in July. At today's rate of 6.41 percent, a $200,000 loan carries a monthly payment of $1,252.32.
SURVEY RESULTS
30-year fixed: 6.41% - up from 6.32% last week (avg. points: 0.42)
15-year fixed: 6.14% - up from 6.11% last week (avg. points: 0.44)
5/1 ARM: 6.49% - up from 6.38% last week (avg. points: 0.41)