
No doubt you've heard that mortgage rates are low. They're lower than they've ever been in history. The news is everywhere.
Just check out some of these headlines from the last 24 hours:
- Mortgage rates set new lows for the 6th straight week (Reuters)
- Mortgage rates fall again; 30-year fixed at 4.54% (Wall Street Journal)
- Mortgage rates hit another low : 4.54% (NPR)
Fixed mortgage rates are now down more than 1/2 percent from the start of the year, and 3/4 percent from just 1 year ago. The drop has dramatically improved home affordability for home buyers in Marietta while creating refinance opportunities for existing homeowners.
From a payment perspective, a conforming, 30-year fixed rate mortgage is now cheaper by $41.94 per month per $100,000 borrowed versus July 2009.
A homeowner with a $300,000 mortgage, therefore, is saving $45,295.20 over 30 years.
Low mortgage rates rarely last long and rates appear to have troughed. After a big downhill between April and July, they're now flat. This could mean rates have finished falling, or that they're gearing up for another drop lower. Either way, if you haven't talked to your real estate agent about home affordability, or your loan officer about refinancing, it may be time to make that call.
If today's market marks the end of low rates, rates are expected to rise quickly.
For the second consecutive month, U.S. consumer confidence is plunging. July's official reading is its lowest since July of last year and the figures run in stark contrast to just two months ago, when the index touched a multi-year high.

Mortgage markets worsened last week for the first time in 6 weeks last week. Investors were pleased with corporate earnings reports and the
Consistent with most post-home buyer tax credit housing news, the National Association of Realtors® says 
Builder confidence in the housing market slipped this month, according to the National Association of Homebuilders' monthly Housing Market Index.
Mortgage markets improved for the 5th straight week last week as consumer confidence waned and inflation data tamed. Investors ignored the news that 19 of 23 reporting S&P 500 companies beat their respective earnings estimates and sold off on stocks.

Conforming mortgage rates may be 
Mortgage markets improved again last week -- if only barely -- throughout a holiday-shortened week devoid of "major" data and market conviction.
In June, for the first time since December 2009, the U.S. workforce shrank.
Mortgage markets improved last week as economic data revealed a slowing U.S. economy.
The Pending Home Sales Index plunged in May 2010, just one month after the expiration of the federal home buyer tax credit program.
As 2009 was ending, the "experts" were busy making forecasts about the U.S. economy and what to expect in 2010.