Today’s mortgage and refinance rates
Average mortgage rates yesterday inched up by the smallest measurable amount. But they’re still comfortably close to the all-time low. And conventional loans today start at 2.75% (2.75% APR) for a 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage.
Find and lock a low rate (Sep 15th, 2020)
Current mortgage and refinance rates
Program | Rate | APR* | Change |
---|---|---|---|
Conventional 30 yr Fixed | 2.75 | 2.75 | Unchanged |
Conventional 15 yr Fixed | 2.625 | 2.625 | Unchanged |
Conventional 5 yr ARM | 3.625 | 3.006 | Unchanged |
30 year fixed FHA | 2.25 | 3.226 | Unchanged |
15 year fixed FHA | 2.25 | 3.191 | Unchanged |
5 year ARM FHA | 2.5 | 3.258 | Unchanged |
30 year fixed VA | 2.25 | 2.421 | Unchanged |
15 year fixed VA | 2.25 | 2.571 | Unchanged |
5 year ARM VA | 2.5 | 2.44 | Unchanged |
Your rate might be different. Click here for a personalized rate quote. See our rate assumptions here. |
Find and lock a low rate (Sep 15th, 2020)
How mortgage rates are determined and why you should care
COVID-19 mortgage updates: Mortgage lenders are changing rates and rules due to COVID-19. To see the latest on how coronavirus could impact your home loan, click here.
Should you lock a mortgage rate today?
Mortgage rates have been doing a lot of inching, edging and nudging — up and down — over recent months. True, they’ve soared or tumbled on rare occasions, most recently in response to a regulator’s actions and second thoughts.
But they’ve been just a little higher, a bit lower or the same on the huge majority of days. Overall, they’ve been gently falling.
This period of calm, sets up a dilemma. Is it worth holding on to the last minute to lock when your gains are likely to be small? And what’s the downside of hanging on to the end when losses are likely to be similarly limited?
For you, the answer must be a personal one: How much risk are you comfortable with?
Just remember, risk is ever-present. Another clumsy regulator or a cataclysmic event could send rates sharply and suddenly in one direction or the other. It’s just that such large movements look less likely now than they often do.
- LOCK if closing in 7 days
- LOCK if closing in 15 days
- FLOAT if closing in 30 days
- FLOAT if closing in 45 days
- FLOAT if closing in 60 days
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Market data affecting today’s mortgage rates
Here’s the state of play this morning at about 9:50 a.m. (ET). The data, compared with about the same time yesterday morning, were:
- The yield on 10-year Treasurys rose to 0.68% from 0.65%. (Bad for mortgage rates.) More than any other market, mortgage rates normally tend to follow these particular Treasury bond yields, though less so recently
- Major stock indexes were higher. (Bad for mortgage rates.) When investors are buying shares they’re often selling bonds, which pushes prices of those down and increases yields and mortgage rates. The opposite happens when indexes are lower
- Oil prices rose to $37.71 from $36.93. (Bad for mortgage rates* because energy prices play a large role in creating inflation and also point to future economic activity.)
- Gold prices edged up to $1,975 an ounce from $1,965. (Neutral for mortgage rates*.) In general, it’s better for rates when gold rises, and worse when gold falls. Gold tends to rise when investors worry about the economy. And worried investors tend to push rates lower.
- CNN Business Fear & Greed index held steady at 62 out of a possible 100 points. (Neutral for mortgage rates.) “Greedy” investors push bond prices down (and interest rates up) as they leave the bond market and move into stocks, while “fearful” investors do the opposite. So lower readings are better than higher ones
Once upon a time, you could look at the above figures and make a pretty good guess about what would happen to mortgage rates that day. But that’s no longer the case. The Fed is now a huge player in the mortgage market and some days can overwhelm investor sentiment.
So use markets only as a rough guide. They have to be exceptionally strong (rates are likely to rise) or weak (they could fall) to rely on them. Today they’re looking worse for mortgage rates, even though this morning’s industrial production figures were disappointing. Investors are focused on an important Fed policy meeting and retail sales figures later this week.
Find and lock a low rate (Sep 15th, 2020)
Important notes on today’s mortgage rates
Here are some things you need to know:
- The Fed’s ongoing interventions in the mortgage market ($1 trillion and counting) should put continuing downward pressure on these rates. But it can’t work miracles all the time. So expect short-term rises as well as falls. And read “For once, the Fed DOES affect mortgage rates. Here’s why” if you want to understand that aspect of what’s happening
- Typically, mortgage rates go up when the economy’s doing well and down when it’s in trouble. But there are exceptions
- Only “top-tier” borrowers (with stellar credit scores, big down payments and very healthy finances) get the ultralow mortgage rates you’ll see advertised
- Lenders vary. Yours may or may not follow the crowd when it comes to rate movements — though they all usually follow the wider trend over time
- When rate changes are small, some lenders will adjust closing costs and leave their rate cards the same
- At times of high demand, lenders can push up rates as a way of managing their workflow. Neither markets nor the Fed can help when that happens
So there’s a lot going on here. And nobody can claim to know with certainty what’s going to happen to mortgage rates in coming hours, days, weeks or months. But check out what 10 experts think could happen between now and the end of this year:
Mortgage rate and housing market predictions for late-2020
Are mortgage and refinance rates rising or falling?
Over the last few months, the overall trend for mortgage rates has clearly been downward. A new all-time low was set early in August and another looked possible a couple of weeks ago — before better-than-expected employment data snatched that possibility away. Still, a new one remains tantalizingly close.
Looking further ahead, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) each has a team of economists dedicated to monitoring and forecasting what will happen to the economy, the housing sector and mortgage rates.
Expert mortgage rate forecasts
And here are their current rates forecasts for the last two quarters of 2020 (Q3/20 and Q4/20) and the first two of 2021 (Q1/21 and Q2/21).
Note that Fannie’s and the MBA’s are updated monthly while Freddie’s are published quarterly So Freddie’s sometimes feel stale. The numbers in the table below are for 30-year, fixed-rate mortgages:
Forecaster | Q3/20 | Q4/20 | Q1/21 | Q2/21 |
Fannie Mae | 3.0% | 2.9% | 2.8% | 2.7% |
Freddie Mac | 3.3% | 3.3% | 3.2% | 3.2% |
MBA | 3.0% | 3.1% | 3.1% | 3.1% |
So expectations vary considerably. You pays yer money …
Find your lowest rate today
According to federal regulator the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, shopping around for your new mortgage or refinance is important. You could save thousands over just a few years by getting quotes from multiple lenders.
But you’ve rarely had more to gain by shopping around than you do now. The mortgage market is currently very messy. And some lenders are offering appreciably lower rates than others. Worse, some are making it harder to get any mortgage at all if you want a cash-out refinance, a loan for an investment property, a jumbo loan or if your credit score is damaged.
So shopping around could get you the loan you want — and save you a bundle.
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