Weekly Mortgage Applications Fall 2.2%: MBA

Mortgage applications fell across the board this week, with prospective borrower interest in government-insured loans marking the only consistent — but slight — gain in the last several months. Total mortgage applications submitted for the week ending August 28 dipped 2.2% below the previous week but still sits an unadjusted 22.7% above the year-ago week, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association‘s (MBA) weekly survey. The volume of applications submitted exclusively for refinance fell 3.1% from the previous week, keeping the refi share of total applications at 56.5%. The MBA noted only government purchase applications — or applications for FHA-insured loans — gained this week, rising 0.5% in the seventh consecutive weekly increase. Purchase applications for government-insured loans accounted for 40.4% of total applications submitted in August, up from 38.3% in July and from 31.7% a year earlier. The MBA said August marks the highest government-insured share of applications since February 1991. A separate survey conducted by Mortgage Maxx found household application activity fell 4.8% in the same week. The Mortgage Application Index — or MAX — measures household activity in the application process by adjusting total application volume to count multiple submissions from a single household as one participant. MAX publisher Paul Descloux, in his weekly commentary on the index, notes overall activity remains low, despite a “one week hiatus” that ended August 21. He says an approaching deadline on the first-time homebuyer tax credit may spike activity in coming weeks. “Refinancings remain tepid as the cost savings analysis vis a vis destroyed asset values are problematic for many,” Descloux writes. Write to Diana Golobay.

Most Popular Articles

Latest Articles

2024 is not the year to cut corners on staging — here’s why 

With home prices reaching unprecedented heights and interest rates soaring, the discerning nature of today’s buyers requires all agents to employ every possible advantage. Simply put, cutting corners on staging is a risky move that risks prolonged market presence.

3d rendering of a row of luxury townhouses along a street

Log In

Forgot Password?

Don't have an account? Please