3 Banks In Focus On Refinancing Upticks

 | Nov 04, 2014 12:23AM ET

The moribund lending business received a boost on the recent surge in mortgage refinancing activities. Recent drop in mortgage rates below 4% mark amid decline in 10-Year Treasury yields resulted in the spur of refinancing activity by homeowners.

According to the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA), the Refinancing Index – a gauge of refinancing applications – jumped 23% in the week ending Oct 17, touching the highest level since Nov 2013. In the previous week, the gauge had climbed 11%.

For the week ending Oct 17, the purchase index declined 4.8%, pushing the share of home loan applicants seeking to refinance to 65%, the highest since Dec 2013. During the previous week, the refinance share of mortgage activity increased to 59% of total applicants, the highest level since Feb 2014.

However, there are constraints to this uptick in refinancing activities. Millions of homeowners already refinanced in 2013. In May 2013, 30-year fixed mortgage rates were less than 3.5%. Further, many home borrowers are already in the range of 3.5–4% on their mortgages, according to Michael Fratantoni, MBA’s chief economist.

Nevertheless, the recent drop in mortgage rates fueled mortgage refinancing activity. Let us now see how the mortgage rates progressed in the last six weeks:

Mortgage Rates Remains Low

The standard 30-Year mortgage rate started rising from mid-2013 after the Federal Reserve hinted at phasing out its asset-purchasing program in order to keep borrowing costs low. Rates for 30-year loans began increasing from 3.35% in May 2013 to 4.53% at the beginning of 2014. Analysts projected the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage to exceed 5% in 2014.

However, rates dipped to 4.12% by May 2014 and remained more or less unchanged before rising to 4.23% in mid-September. Afterwards, rates again started sliding. Let’s look at Freddie Mac’s weekly Primary Mortgage Survey table for the last six weeks: