- Jacob Schmidt, CEO of Schmidt Research Partners Ltd., sees changes to hedge-fund transparency, fees. (video)
- US mortgage rates, already the lowest since Freddie Mac started tracking them in 1971, have plenty of room to fall if history is any guide. The average 30-year fixed-rate mortgage is still relatively costly compared with the yield on 10-year Treasury notes, a benchmark for home loans. The difference, or spread, between them exceeded 3 percentage points this week for the first time since 1986. The gap has averaged 1.64 points during the past two decades. Add that figure to the benchmark Treasury’s yield on Dec. 24 and the resulting mortgage rate would be 3.82%, well below this week’s reading of 5.14%. It’s possible that the spread may narrow to 1.25 points because the government is “absolutely obsessed” with making home loans more affordable, Don Hays, an investment strategist with Hays Advisory LLC, wrote. Hays projected that the 30-year fixed rate will drop as low as 4.25% by March, and perhaps sooner. “That will really ignite the spirits of home buyers,” he wrote.
Wall Street Journal:
MarketWatch.com:
ZDNet:
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USA Today:
SiliconAlleyInsider:
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