Rates Hit 10th Consecutive Low

The average rate for a 30-year fixed rate mortgage as tracked by Freddie Mac fell for the 10th consecutive week in a row to another survey-record low of 5.01%, down from 5.09% the week before. "Since the end of October 2008, these rates have declined by almost 1 ½ percentage points, or payment savings of about $184 a month for a $200,000 loan - an additional $11 dollars from last week," said Freddie Mac chief economist Frank Nothaft in the weekly report. The average 30-year rate was up from 5.87% a year ago. The average 15-year FRM rate was 4.62%, down from 4.83% the previous week and from 5.43% a year ago. It has not been lower since June 13, 2003 when it was 4.6%. The average rate for five-year Treasury-indexed hybrid adjustable-rate mortgages was 5.49%, down from 5.57% the previous week and 5.63% a year ago. The average rate for one-year Treasury-indexed ARMs was 4.95%, up from 4.85% the previous week but down from 5.37% a year ago. Average points were 0.6 for 30-year FRMs, 0.7 for 15-year FRMs and five-year hybrids and 0.5 for one-year Treasury-indexed ARMs.

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