How A Rising Unemployment Rate Can Help Mortgage Rates Fall
- July 7th, 2009
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Last week’s jobs report is the latest data point to drag down rates for today’s home buyers and would-be refinancers.As reported by the government, the national Unemployment Rate rose to 9.5 percent in June — a 25-year high.
As the percentage of out-of-work Americans grows, households have less disposable income to pump back into the economy.
And so, because consumer spending accounts for two-third of the economy, the growing ranks of the unemployed are forcing markets to change expectations about when the U.S. economy will reach its full recovery.
Inflation is the enemy of mortgage rates. The perceived absence of inflation, therefore, can be its friend.
With fewer working Americans, we can expect slower economic growth plus a smaller probability for inflation over the medium-term. This is why mortgage rates are lower of late, off by as much as a half-percent from the peak.
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Mortgage markets were relatively calm throughout last week’s holiday-shortened trading sessions.After trading within a tight range between Monday and Wednesday, a weak jobs report helped edge rates lower into the weekend.

At the start of the year, the “experts” made a lot of predictions about the U.S. economy and what to expect in 2009.
Mortgage markets improved last week on the heels of benign economic data and a non-inspired press release from the Federal Reserve.Aside from trader momentum, 3 market-moving events helped set the pace last week:
If you only saw the headlines this week, you may have missed another positive sign in the housing market.According to the Census Bureau, the supply of newly-built homes for sale
The Federal Open Market Committee voted to leave the Fed Funds Rate unchanged today within its target range of 0.000-0.250 percent.
The housing market got another dose of good news yesterday.
The Federal Reserve begins its scheduled two-day meeting this morning.