Thursday, October 30, 2008

Waiting on the Sidelines Won’t Benefit Buyers

Consider a typical home that sells for $218,900. You put down 20% and get a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage at today's rate of 5.5%. Monthly principal and interest come to $994.31. Let's say that 12 months from now the same house goes for 10% less, or $197,010. But by then the Fed is jacking up rates to stem inflation. If mortgage costs rise a point, to 6.5%, your monthly payment would be $994.94 and you'd have saved nothing. Meanwhile, home prices might steady and sellers might become less willing to negotiate. And you have spent a year living someplace you'd rather not be.

-- Jim Svinth, chief economist at mortgage firm Lending Tree, “Ignore the Headlines,” by Dan Kadlec, Time Magazine, Feb. 19, 2008.

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