If you’re floating a mortgage rate, or have yet to lock one in, today may be a good day to call your loan officer. Friday morning, the government releases its Non-Farm Payrolls report at 8:30 AM ET.
The Non-Farm Payrolls report is more commonly called the “jobs report“ and, lately, it’s been Wall Street’s domestic economic metric of choice. As jobs go, so go markets.
In the 12 months beginning November 2007, the economy shed 2.3 million on its way to losing more than 7 million jobs by the end of 2009.
It’s no coincidence that the stock market has been wayward. Jobs are a keystone in the U.S. economy and the connection between jobs and growth is straight-forward :
- Workers spend more than non-workers and consumer spending is the economy’s largest single component
- Workers pay more taxes to governments and, when governments have money, they build and spend on projects
- Additional consumer and government spending creates revenue for businesses which, in turn, hire more workers.
It’s a self-reinforcing cycle. More employees begets more employees.
As a rate shopper in District of Columbia , this is an important understanding. Job loss was, in part, behind the big drop in mortgage rates since 2007. A weak economy drives investors away from equities and into safer securities such as mortgage bonds (which are backed by the U.S. government).
The excess demand causes mortgage rates to drop and that’s exactly what we’ve seen. Since late-2007, mortgage rates have been in decline.
In the first 11 months of 2011, though, 1.5 million people went back to work; the economy showed signs of shoring up and economic optimism is returning. Mortgage markets have temporarily ceded to the Eurozone, but with one more strong jobs report to close out the year, momentum could tip and stock markets could roll.
If that happens, mortgage rates will rise. Maybe by a lot.
This is why Friday’s Non-Farm Payrolls data is so important. Economists expect that 150,000 new jobs were created in December. If the government’s actual number is larger than that, prepare for higher mortgage rates.
Conversely, if job creation falls short of 150,000, mortgage rates may fall.
If the prospect of rising mortgage rates makes you nervous, remove your nerves from the equation. Call your loan officer and lock your rate ahead of Friday’s Non-Farm Payrolls release.
Related articles
- Housing And Mortgage : The Experts Make Their 2012 Predictions (msqrealty.com)
- Friday’s Jobs Report Represents A Big Risk To Low Mortgage Rates (msqrealty.com)
- A Mortgage Rate Strategy Ahead Of Friday’s Jobs Report (msqrealty.com)
- Mortgage Payments Fall 12% Since February 2011 (msqrealty.com)
- With The Jobs Report Looming, Mortgage Rates May Rise (msqrealty.com)
Is More Fed-Led Stimulus On Its Way?
Home Affordability Getting A Springtime Boost From Greece
M Squared Real Estate Announces Ultra-Modern, New Condo Residences for Shaw, Washington DC.
8-Fold Increase In "Improving Markets" Since September
With LIBOR Low, Don't Rush To Refinance Your ARM
Small Repairs That Can Raise Your Sales Price
Planning For A Memorial Day Closing
Home Values Start The Year Strong
Mortgage Guidelines Resume Tightening Nationwide
Pending Home Sales Index Crosses The 100 Barrier
New Home Sales Revised Higher In February; Slip 7% In March
The Fed Starts A 2-Day Meeting Today. Make A Strategy.
Single-Family Housing Starts Slip 0.2% In March
Homebuilder Confidence Slips 3 Points In April
Mortgage Rates Fall For Third Straight Week
What $300k Buys You in Logan Circle, Washington DC
Homes Get More Affordable On March Jobs Data
Build Your Own Rain Barrel To Save Money, Environment
The Urban Open House Kit : A Closer Look
Fed Minutes Causes Mortgage Rates To Rise Suddenly




Pingback: Valley National Bank Bank Reviews & Ratings « Mortgage Rates Co.
Pingback: Lock Your Mortgage Rate : New Loan Fees Expected Within Days | M Squared Real Estate
Pingback: Home Affordability Set To Worsen On Thursday’s Retail Sales Data | M Squared Real Estate
Pingback: » Lock Your Mortgage Rate : New Loan Fees Expected Within Days » Jessica Wilkie
Pingback: » Home Affordability Set To Worsen On Thursday’s Retail Sales Data » Jessica Wilkie
Pingback: Home Affordability in DC: Down Due to Retail Sales Data?
Pingback: Home Affordability Threatened By Friday’s Jobs Report | M Squared Real Estate
Pingback: Invert Nis