Found 4 blog entries tagged as interest rate.

Realtor.com writes, "Many would-be homebuyers today are sidelined due to one financial hurdle: high mortgage rates that are pushing ever closer to 7%. Yet instead of getting a 2024 rate, some Veterans can get a low rate from years ago.

For military families, Veterans Affairs loans (or VA loans) offer a unique edge: the option to assume an existing VA loan from a seller, keeping the original low rate intact.

For qualifying buyers, these assumable VA loans, known as assumable mortgages, can mean major savings—especially when today’s rates are considerably higher than what sellers locked in years ago.

“If both buyer and seller are VA loan-eligible, the seller can pass on their current mortgage, and current rate, to the buyer without forfeiting…

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(Illustration by Realtor.com; Source: Getty Images)

Realtor.com shares "APR vs. interest rate: What’s the difference? If you’re applying for a mortgage, these are two financial terms you need to understand. APR stands for “annual percentage rate,” or the amount of interest on your total loan that you’ll pay annually over the life of the loan. It’s slightly different from the interest rate, which is the cost you’ll pay each day based on your mortgage balance.

These terms might be foreign to you, especially if this is your first time buying a home. But don’t worry—we’ll break down what each one is so that you’re ready to be a savvy mortgage shopper. Let’s first start by discussing the mortgage interest rate.

What is a mortgage interest rate?

Simply put, the interest rate is the cost you will pay…

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Adjustable-rate mortgages are more popular this summer than they've been since right before the Great Recession.

The share of mortgage applications for ARMs rose to 12.6% in June before they dipped to 12.2% in July, according to an analysis by Seattle-based Zillow Group Inc. (Nasdaq: ZG). It's the first time since August 2007 the share of ARMs among mortgage applications has been more than 12%.

While that could trigger some alarm bells, the conditions today — including lending standards — are very different than the years leading up to the housing crash of the late 2000s, said Jeff Tucker, senior economist at Zillow.

"It's something to keep an eye on but, at the moment, it doesn’t look concerning to us," Tucker said. In the years leading up…

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Despite an interest-rate hike of three-quarters of a percent by the Federal Reserve on Wednesday, and additional increases likely still to come, some housing economists aren't expecting another big surge in mortgage rates now or in the coming months.

A recent slowdown observed in the U.S. housing market has largely stemmed from the sudden jump in mortgage rates felt in late spring and early summer, in line with the Fed's decision to move up interest rates in an ongoing effort to combat inflation.

Existing-home sales declined for the fifth straight month in June, down 5.4% from May and 14.2% from the prior year, according to the National Association of Realtors. Unsold inventory was at three months' supply nationally in June, up from 2.6…

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