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Mortgage Rates Fell. No, they Rose. No, they…

DAVIDSONVILLE,  ANNAPOLIS, EDGEWATER, ARNOLD AND SEVERNA PARK REAL ESTATE

Keeping an eye on Edgewater mortgage rates is a useful pastime for anyone who tracks local home sales because of the immediate effect they have on affordability. It can’t get much more immediate than the “projected monthly payment” numbers that calculators come up with alongside an online listing. Those instant calculations include tax and insurance estimates, but those change rarely. The mortgage rates, are always on the move.

Last Thursday, the Washington Post’s headline ran above a photo of Freddie Mac’s massive DC headquarters:

Mortgage rates fall amid fears of rising inflation.”

That kind of news is always good for Edgewater home buyers and sellers. Not the “rising inflation” part, of course—but the other part. Lower mortgage rates mean better bargains for buyers who become motivated to strike a deal sooner rather than later.

But then, Friday afternoon brought Bankrate’s headline:

Mortgage rates increase for Friday.”

Anyone accustomed to following the mortgage interest rate gyrations wouldn’t have been surprised. It meant that the mortgage rate yo-yo was behaving pretty much as expected. Logic indicates that The Post’s inflation fears had probably not disappeared overnight, so their reasoning behind Thursday’s move had likely been overly presumptive. (When rates rise or fall, writers don’t like to admit there’s no story explaining why).

The reasons behind the up and down were probably elusive—something like the normal ebbs and flows of national and international capital flows. If anyone has ever been able to sort all that out, they’re keeping mum about it.

It does seem that Edgewater mortgage rates are beginning to follow a more predictable pattern than has been true for a while. Despite daily ups and downs—which are usually pretty microscopic—the drift has been gradual but notable, and supports two reasonable generalizations:

  • Edgewater mortgage rates are drifting upward. A chart would show that, when you step back and ignore the day-to-day ups and downs, except for a divot in mid-December, the trend has been slightly skyward since the middle of November.
  • Edgewater mortgage rates are still a bargain by all historical measures.

What this means for prospective buyers as we enter the spring selling season is, in short, pretty good news. Buying now means locking in Edgewater mortgage rates that are still historically affordable.

But first things first—the right home has to be found, and the right price agreed upon. That’s where giving me a call comes in!

DEBORAH LAGGINI, Long and Foster Real Estate, Annapolis, MD 21403

OFFICE 410-263-3400

CELL 410.991.6560

Website www.deborahlaggini.com

EMAIL [email protected]

REALTOR, Annapolis, Davidsonville, Edgewater, and Surrounding Communities

 

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