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Mortgage market has opportunities for consumers MADISON, Wis. (11/4/09)--Nearly 6.5 million home owners are deciding whether to stay with their adjustable-rate mortgages or lock in fixed rates (Money November). In fact, September's 9.4% sales increase was the largest monthly hike in 26 years as buyers moved to qualify for the first-time buyers incentives expiring this month. Nationwide, sales are up nearly 24% since January (MSNBC Oct. 23). Foreclosures and short sales--where the mortgage exceeds the sales price--have forced prices downward 9% from a year earlier. The median price in September was $174,900, down from $191,200 in September 2008. And prices could fall further if unemployment, expected to rise to 10.5% next year, leads to more foreclosures. Inventories of unsold homes, which fell about 7% in September, are at their lowest level since March of 2007 but could well rise with higher unemployment. In fact, what is happening in the mortgage market is regional. During the past three years, home prices in metro areas of 23 states recorded gains. The South, the Plains, and most of the non-coastal West showed some ability to weather the stormy mortgage market, according to Fiserv (CNN/Money Oct. 21). Meanwhile, 16 states--those in the Northeast plus California, Florida, Nevada, and Arizona--have posted declines. For many consumers, the issue is whether to lock in a fixed rate. Roughly 6.5 million homeowners have adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs) and many of those notes are coming up for adjustment. For the short term, consumers with ARMs should be fine. But once the economy stabilizes and the government starts to remove policies that are keeping mortgage rates low, rates are likely to rise. Here are some thoughts about whether to stand pat with your ARM or move to a fixed rate:
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