MortgageMortgage Rates

Freddie Mac: Mortgage rates drop four consecutive weeks

Market reacts to Fed interest rate announcement

Mortgage rates once again moved lower amid continuous market turmoil, the latest Freddie Mac Primary Mortgage Market Survey said.

This marks the fourth consecutive week that mortgage rates moved lower. Last week, rates also fell due to market turbulence driving investors to Treasuries.

“The recent market turmoil has given the Fed pause; as was universally expected, the Fed stood pat this week but kept its options open for a rate increase in March,” said Sean Becketti, chief economist with Freddie Mac.

The Federal Open Market Committee announced Wednesday in its first meeting since it decided to raise interest rates that it will keep the federal funds rate at a range of 0.25% to 0.50%, which didn’t come as a giant surprise.

An article in CNN Money by Patrick Gillespie on the Fed’s release said:

U.S. stocks didn't react well to the Fed's statement. The Dow, which was up about 10 points before the release, dropped down 223 points after the Fed's announcement.

Despite its worries, the Fed stopped short of saying that the volatility in January will change its plans to raise rates at least four times for the rest of 2016. The committee noted that it's "monitoring global economic and financial developments."

Click to enlarge

Mortgage rates

(Source: Freddie Mac)

The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 3.79% for the week ending Jan. 28, 2016, down from 3.81% last week, but up from 3.66% a year ago. 

Additionally, the 15-year FRM this week decreased to 3.07%, falling from 3.10% a week prior. In 2015, the 15-year FRM averaged 2.98%. 

The 5-year Treasury-indexed hybrid adjustable-rate mortgage averaged 2.90% this week, a drop from last week when it averaged 2.91%. A year ago, the 5-year ARM came in at 2.86%.

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