Philadelphia Inquirer (06/13/08)
Speculation that the central bank could reverse its rate-cutting campaign later this year as a way to keep inflation in check drove up mortgage borrowing costs during the past week, according to Freddie Mac. Interest on 30-year loans settled at 6.32 percent in the latest survey, climbing from 6.09 percent the previous week to the highest level seen in eight months. Rates on 15-year fixed loans moved up to 5.93 percent from 5.65 percent for the week; while one-year adjustable-rate mortgages drifted up to 5.09 percent from 5.06 percent and five-year ARMs floated up to 5.70 percent from 5.51 percent.
Wednesday, June 18, 2008
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