By ,
Published January 13, 2015
Demand for applications to purchase U.S. homes and refinance existing mortgages rose last week, after total loan requests fell the prior two weeks, an industry trade group said on Wednesday.
The Mortgage Bankers Association said its seasonally adjusted index of home loan application activity increased 2.4 percent to 652.0 in the week ended October 5.
The index has been fairly range bound in recent weeks, after slipping to about 607 both in February and again in July, and rising as high as about 691 in March.
The trade group's gauge of home purchase applications gained 2.1 percent to 420.2, and the refinancing measure rose 2.7 percent to 2,003.2 on a seasonally adjusted basis last week.
Homeowners are scrambling to refinance adjustable mortgages before they reset to much higher interest rates.
Refinancing requests represented 46.2 percent of total applications last week, up slightly from 46.0 the prior week, the MBA said. Adjustable-rate mortgages accounted for 13.6 percent of the total, down from 13.8 percent.
Average 30-year fixed mortgage rates increased 0.08 percentage point to 6.40 percent last week, which is 0.13 point higher than the same week a year ago, according to the trade group.
Among shorter-term loan products, the one-year adjustable-rate mortgage rate dipped 0.05 percentage point last week to 6.15 percent, up 0.27 point from the same week a year earlier.
https://www.foxnews.com/story/home-mortgage-demand-rises-2-4