Nutley Mortgage Rates to Move Lower…or is it Higher?

After such a long time remaining at the lowest levels anyone can remember, Nutley mortgage rates have been climbing out of the cellar. No one who was paying attention expected them to stay at the almost unbelievably low levels they’d held for more than a year, so that was anything but a surprise.

But for Nutley home shoppers and sellers, it is the future of mortgage rates that is most important. Because Nutley mortgage rates are the basis by which monthly payments are calculated, knowing what to expect in their movement would enable anyone to make the best decision about whether now is the time to buy or sell — or whether even a short delay might mean the same monthly outlay could buy more house.

Experience teaches that literally no one can accurately predict those rate movements, but I thought I’d look for some of the most current advice on the matter to see if they could supply any enlightenment. The answer (certainly more predictable than the rates) was…not really.

Last Friday, Mortgage News Daily had what you’d have to call the typical take. After headlining “Mortgage Rates Slightly Lower For Third Straight Day,” they admitted that the national rates, while under July 23rd lows, were reflecting “a detachment from the financial market data.”

In other words, the lower mortgage rates didn’t follow any rational reasoning that their correspondents could discover. Further explanation followed, but wasn’t much more helpful for making any predictions. “Quiet days and quiet weeks have a sort of inertia in that the higher and lower boundaries of rate movements are fairly well entrenched unless [blah blah blah]… which happens because of low volume and low participation.”

In other words: it’s August. Nothing (or anything) might happen when the financial traders are off on vacation. Another interpretation: if you’re intending to buy or sell a home in town, the hope that waiting will yield improved local mortgage rates is unlikely to give you much more than a 50-50 chance.

In other words, give me a call when you’re ready to buy or sell. That’s the right time!

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    Nutley Mortgage Rate Hikes Pose Riddle

    This is one of those multiple-choice questions: which is true – A, B, C, D, or E?

    A) If the headline reads NUTLEY MORTGAGE RATES ON THE RISE! it means it’s time to buy (quick) before they go up further!

    B) If the headline reads NUTLEY MORTGAGE RATES FALL! it means it’s time to buy (quick) to cash in on the savings!

    C) If the headline reads NUTLEY MORTGAGE RATES UNCHANGED! it means it’s time to buy (quick) while the rates are stable!

    D) All of the above.

    E) None of the above.

    My answer is below (and it’s not even upside-down), but before anyone even looks down there, I’d like to mention that there is an equally valid second question, which would read ‘sell’ instead of ‘buy.’

    This week is a good time to be pondering both questions. It looks as if the long-lived swoon in mortgage interest rates is about over. “Looks as if” is a carefully chosen phrase, because what seems inevitable in finance has a strong track record of proving wrong. One of the dangers that our current environment presents is that everyone has been correct (about mortgage rates staying in the cellar) for such a long time that they’ve grown accustomed to rates being predictable. They aren’t.

    So the answer to the question is (drum roll, please): E).

    It’s a trick question: when it comes to buying or selling a home, doing anything “quick!” just because of a one-week dip or rise in Nutley mortgage rates is a bad idea. It’s a big decision, one that should be entered into with care and forethought. But if you were to remove the “quick!” from the question, I’d personally tend a little more toward D), but only because I don’t think local mortgage rates are likely to fall right away. And rates today are still, historically, very low.

    Good time to buy, good time to sell. Thoughtfully.

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