Home Loans Fall Off as Sales Slow, Rates Rise

(Los Angeles Times/MCT) —

Fewer home sales and rising interest rates have led to the nation’s lowest level of mortgage lending in 14 years.

Just $235 billion in home loans were started in the first three months of the year, the lowest figure recorded in a quarter since 2000, according to data from trade publication Inside Mortgage Finance.

That’s down nearly a quarter from the end of 2013 and more than half from the same period last year, when the housing market was heating up. And it is lower even than the levels recorded during the worst of the housing crash.

The fall-off was particularly sharp for mortgage refinancing, which was hurt by higher interest rates after record lows last spring. The average 30-year fixed-rate mortgage surged to 4.3 percent, up from 3.3 percent last May. That’s still quite low by historical standards, but the run-up, after years of low rates, means there isn’t a lot of demand for refinancing now.

“We’ve had two or three mini refi waves over the course of the last few years,” said Joel Kan, director of economic forecasting at the Mortgage Bankers Association, noting that many borrowers had already locked in lower rates. “The incentive is not really there for a lot of borrowers to refinance again.”

Those refinance loans had grown to make up an outsized portion of the mortgage business, more than 70 percent of activity a year ago, said Guy Cecala, publisher of Inside Mortgage Finance.

And new buyers haven’t been picking up the slack. The rate of home sales has fallen three months in a row, according to the National Association of Realtors.

Much like the broader housing market, which has seen a brisk sales pace for higher-priced homes, larger mortgages are moving more quickly, Kan said. Activity is strong above the national “jumbo” loan level of $417,000 and up, he said. But that accounts for only about 15 to 20 percent of mortgages.

“The other 80 percent, those are down on a year-over-year basis, and they’ve been down for six months now,” he said.

Kan is one of several economists who see the longtime low interest rates as a factor in slower sales. Homeowners who refinanced into 3-percent rates two years ago are likely to pay a higher rate today if they were to sell their house and buy something bigger. That’s dampening sales in the “move-up” market and making it harder for entry-level homeowners to buy in.

“That slowdown in refi activity is really spilling over into the purchase market,” Kan said.

Still, there are signs of a pickup, especially in purchase loans.

Bank of America says its pipeline of purchase loans set to close in the next six weeks is up 28 percent.

“That’s a good sign for us,” spokesman Terry Francisco said. “It’s a sign that the market is kicking more into a higher gear for 2014.”

And Bob Walters, chief economist at Detroit lending giant Quicken Loans, said his company has seen both purchase and refinancing activity picking up in recent weeks, as the spring housing market has heated up and mortgage rates have ticked down a bit.

Buyers and borrowers have become so sensitive to rates, Walters said, that even a quarter-point swing can affect the market.

“That doesn’t seem like much,” he said. “But it’s bringing people back to the money.”

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