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Consumer confidence up, mortgage rates below 6 percent

Sunny Isles Beach Broker Real Estate News

As consumer confidence soared unexpectedly to an eight-month high in September and foreclosure filings were still up, compared to the same data from a year ago, but significantly lower than previous months.

For the first time since earlier this year mortgage rates have dropped below 6%. Freddie Mac reports that a 30-year fixed loan came in at an average of 5.93%, down from 6.35% in the previous month and 6.31% for the same mortgage a year ago.

A borrower taking out a $400,000 mortgage at 5.93 percent would be paying $2,380.00 in principal and interest, which is $108.00 less a month compared to last week’s rate.

More than half of Florida’s metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) reported increased sales of existing homes in July; seven MSAs also showed gains in condo sales. Realtors around the state reported increased business activity, including more telephone calls, more home showings and a rise in pending sales.

More research information is available on http://www.SunnyIslesBeachBroker.com

Published Monday, September 15, 2008 8:35 AM by Katerina Brosda

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Wednesday, September 17, 2008 3:06 PM by Keeping in real!

# re: Consumer confidence up, mortgage rates below 6 percent

Developers and Builders are continuing to drastically cut the flow of new inventory to the market and that is the essential precondition for market stability. The lower the housing starts the better it is presently and it signals a correction has already taken place and we are at the very bottom and it can only go up from here. How long we remain in this “bottom” entirely depends on socio-economic policies and visionary leadership by elected official. Generally the less regulation of the free markets by bureaucrats the better, but there needs to be something put in place against greed. How about a BailOut Fund all these corporations with exorbitant profits have to share in and divert a portion of their gains to …for future bailouts? Why should it continue to come out of our pockets? Most of us did not share in during the ‘good times’, but we are now forced to share in during the bad times. So it is only logical to me that those putting us at risk have to insure themselves by giving up ‘some’ during those “good times”.

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