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Shopping For Mortgage Rates Is Part Research Skills, Part Luck
You’re going to need some luck.
Mortgage rates for people in Illinois or anywhere else, for that matter, are unpredictable, ever-changing, and rarely change as expected.
For example, when the Federal Reserve left the mortgage market March 31, 2010, analysts said that mortgage rates would rise by a half-percent or more. It was practically stated as fact on TV. When April 1 came around, though, rates didn’t rise.
Instead, a volcano erupted and mortgage rates dropped on safe haven buying.
Then, a week later, as the volcano ash cleared, mortgage rates were supposed to resume their rise. Only they didn’t. Instead, a debt crisis emerged in the Eurozone and mortgage rates dropped.
Since March 31, conforming mortgage rates are lower by roughly 0.125 percent, according to Freddie Mac’s weekly mortgage rate survey. At today’s rates, the savings are roughly $20 per month per $200,000 borrowed — or $100 per month based on their original, post-March 31 forecast.
It brings us to one of the most important axioms in rate shopping: You can’t shop for good luck.
Occasionally, there are days when rates do all three.
As a home buyer or would-be refinancer, what rate you get depends on at what time of day you do your shopping.
You can’t predict what will happen next in mortgage markets — even just an hour from now. Therefore, the smartest move, sometimes, is just lock your rate now. At least that way, you’ve got a guarantee.
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