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NEWS
YOU CAN USE
30-year mortgage rates
lowest since May
Jeannine
Aversa (The Associated
Press)
WASHINGTON
August
28, 2007
Rates
on 30-year mortgages
sank last week to their
lowest point since late
May, providing a little
ray of sunlight for
would-be home buyers.
Mortgage Company
Freddie Mac reported
Thursday that 30-year,
fixed-rate mortgages
averaged 6.52 percent.
That was down from 6.62
percent last week and
was the lowest rate
since the week ending
May 31, when rates stood
at 6.42 percent.
The moderation
provides a dose of
welcome news for
prospective homebuyers,
some of whom also might
be facing a situation of
harder-to-get credit. In
mid-June, rates on
30-year mortgages
climbed to 6.74 percent,
the high for this year.
Other mortgage rates
also went down.
Rates on 15-year
fixed-rate mortgages, a
popular choice for
refinancing, averaged
6.18 percent, down from
6.30 percent last week.
For five-year
adjustable-rate
mortgages, rates dipped
to 6.34 percent, from
6.35 percent last week.
Rates on one-year
adjustable-rate
mortgages fell to 5.60
percent, compared with
5.67 percent last week.
Mortgage rates eased
following last week’s
decision by the Federal
Reserve to slice its
lending rate to banks, a
move designed to calm
recent turmoil on Wall
Street about a spreading
credit crunch.
The mortgage rates
do not include add-on
fees known as points.
Thirty year mortgages
carried a nationwide
average fee of 0.4
point. Fifteen-year
mortgages had a fee of
0.5 point. Five-year and
One-year ARMs each
carried an average fee
of 0.6 point.
A year ago, rates on
30-year mortgages stood
at 6.48 percent, 15-year
mortgages were at 6.18
percent, five year ARMs
averaged 6.14 percent
and one-year ARMs were
at 5.60 percent.
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