Originally published Friday, September 26, 2008 at 12:00 AM
New-home sales fall off; Slowest pace since '91
New-home sales tumbled in August to the slowest pace in 17 years, while mortgage rates spiked this week, increasing pressure on the new chief executives of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to help stabilize the housing market.
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — New-home sales tumbled in August to the slowest pace in 17 years, while mortgage rates spiked this week, increasing pressure on the new chief executives of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to help stabilize the housing market.
New-homes sales fell by 11.5 percent in August to a seasonally adjusted annual sales rate of 460,000 units, the slowest sales pace since January 1991, the Commerce Department said Thursday.
The median price slid 5.5 percent to $221,900.
Despite falling home prices, it remains difficult to qualify for a loan, and mortgage rates are on the rise.
The average interest rate for a 30-year, fixed-rate loan this week is 6.09 percent, up from 5.78 percent last week, Freddie Mac said Thursday. That increase boosts the payment on a $200,000 loan, for example, by about $40 a month.
"We have not seen any [mortgage] program changes, no assistance for clients to make anything different," said Jodi York-Caraballo, owner of Green Valley Mortgage in Bloomingdale, Ill. "They haven't eased up on lending restrictions."
Fannie Mae's new chief executive, Herbert Allison, told lawmakers Thursday that the company is evaluating the higher fees and tighter lending standards that the company put in place over the past year.
Fannie and its sibling company, Freddie Mac, were seized by government regulators nearly three weeks ago.
"We are looking at every aspect of our business," Allison said. "We are examining our underwriting and pricing standards to assure that we strike the right balance between expanding our activities and safeguarding taxpayers.
Freddie Mac's new CEO, David Moffett, said the government intervention is "providing needed confidence" to investors, and noted that the company sold more than $8 billion in mortgage-backed securities over the past 10 days.
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are the dominant players in the U.S. mortgage market.
While they don't make loans directly to consumers, they own or guarantee more than $5 trillion in loans, about half of the nation's total.
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The two companies saw their finances deteriorate as an alarming number of homeowners fell behind on their payments and went into foreclosure.
Rather than reassuring investors, the historic government takeover on Sept. 7 spread fear through financial markets about the health of banks and investment firms that may hold even riskier mortgage assets than Fannie and Freddie.
Besides the weak housing report, the government said Thursday that new claims for unemployment benefits shot up last week to the highest level in seven years.
Orders to factories for big-ticket manufactured goods fell last month by 4.5 percent, far more than expected.
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
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