Quarter's Refinances May Cut Payments by $3.4 Billion in Coming Year

Refinances tracked by Freddie Mac in the second quarter are expected to cut payments by about $3.4 billion in the coming year. Refinancing borrowers' new interest rates were approximately 1.25% below the old rates on average. "We are anticipating more than one-half of originations to be for refinancing throughout the rest of the year as long as rates stay their current levels of 5.25%," said Freddie Mac vice president and chief economist Frank Nothaft. In the second quarter, cashout refinancing dropped to its lowest share since the third quarter of 2003, according to Freddie's Refinance Report. Sixty two percent of borrowers with a prime credit quality conventional second-lien mortgage either kept the same principal balance or reduced it, up from a revised 57% in the first quarter. The share of refinance loans resulting in new loan amounts that were at least 5% higher than the paid-off second lien mortgage balances fell to a six-year low of 38%. The first-quarter cash-out share was revised down to 43%. "In the second quarter, about $25 billion in home equity was cashed out by homeowners when they refinanced their conventional prime-credit home mortgage. This is up a little less than $5 billion from the first quarter volume, but, importantly, the rise reflects the jump in the number of loans refinanced rather than an increase in the amount borrowers are cashing out per loan," said Amy Crews Cutts, Freddie Mac deputy chief economist.

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