Shutdown is having ‘notable impact’ on mortgages
Applications for government mortgage products dropped to a six-year low last week, as negotiations to end the U.S. government’s partial shutdown and avert a debt default rocked back and forth between progress and deadlock.
While total mortgage applications inched higher by 0.3 percent week-to-week, the increase was driven entirely by a 3 percent rise in refinances, according to a weekly survey by the Mortgage Bankers Association. Mortgage applications to purchase a home dropped a wider 5 percent.
While the Federal Housing Administration (FHA), the government’s insurer of low downpayment loans, is still largely operational, another program from the U.S. Department of Agriculture is out of commission entirely due to the shutdown. Most FHA lenders can still process loans through an automated system, but loans that need more complicated approval have been delayed; the same is true of the Veterans Administration program.
“The government shutdown had a notable impact on the mortgage market last week. Purchase applications for government programs dropped by more than 7 percent over the week to their lowest level since December 2007, and the government share of purchase applications dropped to its lowest level in almost three years,” said Mike Fratantoni, MBA’s vice president of research and economics. “FHA lenders with delegated authority have been able to continue, but those that rely on the regional homeownership centers have not. Additionally, HUD staff at headquarters are generally furloughed and not able to answer questions.”
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