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30-year fixed mortgage rate hovers at 4%

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The mortgage engine seems stuck in low.

For five straight weeks, Freddie Mac’s survey of the rates offered by home lenders for 30-year loans has averaged at or below 4%.

The most recent Freddie survey came out Thursday at an even 4% — a level that would have seemed hallucinatory not so long ago. That was before the Federal Reserve pulled out the interest-rate stops to support the economy.

The 15-year fixed loan average, at 3.3%, also remains in record-low territory, and Freddie Mac said the start rates on adjustable mortgages have dipped to all-time lows.

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Something else also appears to be low, despite the record rates — the desire for new home loans.

A Mortgage Bankers Assn. count of applications showed an 11.7% decrease last week even after adjusting for seasonal factors such as the Thanksgiving holiday. The previous MBA weekly survey also had shown a decline as the latest wave of refinancings began to subside.

A Fed report this week on regional economic conditions described residential real estate markets as generally sluggish. But the report also said the economy expanded at a moderate pace in 11 of the Fed’s 12 districts — a fact that provided encouragement to Freddie Mac economist Frank Nothaft.

“The extraordinarily low mortgage rates of the past month may provide a needed spur to housing activity,” Nothaft said in the latest Freddie Mac release.

scott.reckard@latimes.com

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