Skip to main content

The MBA finds mortgage applications are at their lowest level since 2000

 

House expense and cost, too expensive payment or high interest rate mortgage concept, heavy house broke savings piggybank metaphor of too much payment Source: AdobeStock.

Mortgage applications fell for the third week in row, reaching their lowest level since 2000, the Mortgage Bankers Association reported Wednesday.

Meanwhile, the National Association of Realtors reported Wednesday that the streak of falling sales of existing homes stretched into a fifth month in June.

The MBA’s Market Composite Index of loan application volume for the week ending July 15 was 6.3% lower than the previous week after seasonal adjustments. Refinances, which have been slashed by rising interest rates, fell a further 4% for the week ending July 15, and were down 80% from a year earlier.

But the three-week falling streak also extended to mortgages for home buyers. Purchase applications fell a seasonally adjusted 7% from the previous week. That followed drops of 4% in each of the two previous weeks after a bare 0.1% gain for the week ending June 24.

“Purchase activity declined for both conventional and government loans, as the weakening economic outlook, high inflation and persistent affordability challenges are impacting buyer demand,” Joel Kan, the MBA’s assistant vice president of economic and industry forecasting, said.

“Similarly, with most mortgage rates more than two percentage points higher than a year ago, demand for refinances continues to plummet, with the MBA’s refinance index also falling to a 22-year low,” Kan said.

Joel Kan Joel Kan

That followed the MBA’s report Tuesday that mortgage applications for new home purchases in June fell 12% compared to a year ago and an unadjusted 10% from May. It said new-home purchase applications were at the lowest level since April 2020.

“The decline in recent purchase applications aligns with slower homebuilding activity due to reduced buyer traffic and ongoing building material shortages and higher costs,” Kan said.

The National Association of Realtors reported that existing single-family homes, townhomes, condominiums and co-ops were sold at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.12 million in June, down 5.4% from May and down 14.2% from a year ago. Single-family homes sold at a SAAR of 4.57 million in June, down 4.8% from May and down 12.8% from a year ago.

The median existing-home price for all housing types in June was $416,000, up 13.4% from June 2021. The single-family home median was $423,300 in June, up 13.3% from a year ago.

“Falling housing affordability continues to take a toll on potential home buyers,” NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun said. “Both mortgage rates and home prices have risen too sharply in a short span of time.”

Total housing inventory was 1.26 million units at the end of June, up 9.6% from May and up 2.4% from a year ago. Unsold inventory sat at a 3.0-month supply at the current sales pace, up from 2.6 months in May and 2.5 months in June 2021.

Lawrence Yun Lawrence Yun

However, properties typically remained on the market for just 14 days in June — the fewest since NAR began tracking it in May 2011. It was down from 16 days in May and 17 days in June 2021. Among homes sold in June, 80% were on the market for less than a month.

“Finally, there are more homes on the market,” Yun said. “Interestingly though, the record-low pace of days on market implies a fuzzier picture on home prices. Homes priced right are selling very quickly, but homes priced too high are deterring prospective buyers.”

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

New Year’s Resolution: Getting Your Estate in Order

        Helping families and their businesses plan for the future     Your Most Important New Year’s Resolution: Getting Your Estate in Order   Happy New Year to all. Every January, millions of Americans resolve to lose weight, exercise more, or learn a new skill. These are admirable goals. But there’s one resolution that matters more than all of them combined—one that most people avoid because it forces them to confront their own mortality. Get your estate in order. Not next year. Not when you retire. Now. The Problem With Tomorrow Here’s what I see constantly...

Leasing Set To Surge In 2026?—Credit Unions May Miss Out If They Don’t Move

  CINCINNATI—As credit unions look to revive auto lending in 2026 after a sluggish year, one lending tool may become indispensable: vehicle leasing. With new-car prices still historically high, negative equity rising, and manufacturers fighting for market share, leasing is poised for a major rebound this year—and credit unions that remain on the sidelines risk losing out on strong, recurring loan volume. That’s the message from Scot Hall, executive vice president at  Swapalease.com , who says the economic and market dynamics heading into 2026 are aligning in ways that make leasing not only attractive, but essential. “Prices are up and they’re not coming down anytime soon,” Hall said, noting that inflation, tariffs, supply volatility, and chip-related uncertainty continue to push vehicle pricing higher. “Leasing is a great way to combat that. It’s also a great way to get somebody out of negative equity in a relatively short period of time.” Market Conditions Are Setting the Sta...

NCUA Issues 2026 Supervisory Priorities Letter to Credit Unions

Alexandria, VA (January 14, 2026)  ― The National Credit Union Administration (NCUA) today announced its 2026 Supervisory Priorities, which continue the agency’s policy of “No Regulation by Enforcement,” while prioritizing safety and soundness. This policy underscores NCUA’s commitment to providing clarity and transparency in its oversight. The letter outlines NCUA’s priorities for the year and provides information to help credit unions prepare for examinations. This year, the agency will continue to focus on risk-based supervision, tailoring the examination scope to the credit union’s unique risk profile. Key Highlights of the 2026 Supervisory Priorities: Risk-Focused Examinations:  Examiners will concentrate on areas posing the greatest risk to credit union members, the credit union system, and the Share Insurance Fund. Balance Sheet Management and Lending:  With loan performance at its weakest point in over a decade, examiners will review credit risk management practic...

A 10% Cap, A Busy Congress, And Big Stakes For Credit Unions This Week

WASHINGTON—Credit union trade groups entered the week in Washington closely monitoring developments after President Trump’s proposal for a nationwide 10% cap on credit card interest rates, even as Congress returns to work on funding, financial services reform, and digital asset legislation. Both the Defense Credit Union Council and America’s Credit Unions say the rate-cap proposal poses an immediate threat to consumers credit unions disproportionately serve, while a fast-moving legislative agenda could shape the industry’s operating landscape for years. DCUC President and CEO Anthony Hernandez said the defense-focused trade group mobilized within hours of the President’s announcement, warning the cap could sharply limit access to credit for junior enlisted servicemembers, young officers with student loan debt, and federal workers already strained by a potential shutdown. Anthony Hernandez Hernandez said DCUC began responding within hours, providing comments to the press Friday night an...

IRS Issues Ruling on Federal Credit Unions and COVID Credit

WASHINGTON–The Internal Revenue Service has issued a ruling that credit unions can receive a 2021 COVID Credit, but not 2020. In other words, federally chartered CUs can’t claim the employee retention credit for periods in 2020 but can do so for periods in 2021, because later amendments to the terms of the credit made them eligible, according to the IRS. Specifically, FCUs can’t claim the credit for wages paid after March 12, 2020, and before Jan. 1, 2021. The ruling was issued by the IRS Office of Chief Counsel in a newly released legal  memorandum . According to the IRS, FCUs are able to claim the credit for wages paid after Dec. 31, 2020, and before Oct. 1, 2021, the IRS said. The Employee Retention Credit (ERC) – sometimes called the Empl...

Syracuse Fire Department Credit Union

 Congrats, Tonia, on your promotion! ================================================= Remember, you're not alone with  NCOFCU.org Join/Upgrade Check out some of NCOFCU's additional features: First Responder Credit Union Academy Financial Literacy Podcasts YouTube Mini's Blog Job Board

What Could Tokenized Deposits Mean for CUs?

WASHINGTON—Noting that the FDIC has expressed support for tokenized deposits as insured bank liabilities, not experimental digital assets, a new analysis offers some insights into what that could mean for financial institutions, credit unions and the market in 2026 and beyond.  As PYMNTS Intelligence pointed out in its report, regulatory clarity reduces risk for banks moving from pilots to live deployments, and large banks and infrastructure providers are already testing real-world tokenized deposit use cases.  “At its simplest, tokenization converts an existing claim into a digital representation on a distributed ledger,” the report explained. “The underlying asset does not change, but the infrastructure that tracks ownership and settlement does. In banking, that distinction is critical. Tokenized deposits do not create new money. They represent traditional bank deposits, issued and redeemed by regulated institutions but designed to operate on modern, programma...

The 10-Year Fixed-Rate Mortgage Worth Bragging About

Sound like anyone we know? “Approximately half of its membership is 50 years old or older, says Star One marketing manager Susanna Fong. The 10-year mortgage is meant to entice those members close to retirement to bring their loans — including the remainder of a 30-year-mortgage — to the credit union.” How Star One’s 14-month-old mortgage product attracts both young professionals and soon-to-be retirees. By Erik Payne creditunions.com For borrowers nearing retirement, desirable mortgage options are limited. Long-term loans can extend into retirement years and cut into savings earmarked for food, travel, and other expenses. Short-term loans can make budgeting difficult for the remaining working years. Star One Credit Union ($7.2B, Sunnyvale, CA) understands that borrowers want to be free of loan obligations before they leave the workforce without breaking the bank to do so. So in January of 2014, the credit union introduced a promotional 10-year fixed-rate mortgage that charges no...

NCUA Board to Deal With Interest Rate Risk, Loan Workouts, Derivatives

First meeting of 2012 set for next week, includes issues of considerable importance to credit unions. The agency said in its proposed rule that federally insured credit unions with assets of more than $50 million and smaller ones with potentially risky loan portfolios are required to have policies to evaluate the institution’s interest rate risk exposure, set risk limits and test for interest rate shocks. Federally insured credit unions with assets of $10 million to $50 million would have to comply if they hold first mortgages and investments with maturities greater than five years that are equal to or greater than 100% of their net worth.   Read More; NCUA Board to Deal With Interest Rate Risk, Loan Workouts, Derivatives :

7 Things to Do (And Avoid) with SMS/Text in Credit Union Marketing

By not using SMS text messaging for marketing, you are missing a channel with a 98% open rate and a rapid response rate. Consumers love the convenience and are open to receiving personalized and relevant texts from their bank and credit union. Naturally there are some caveats to be aware of. Here are seven pointers. Are you content to have your customers take 90 minutes to respond back to a communication you’ve sent, or would 90 seconds be better? That’s the difference in average response times between email and SMS text. Then there is the open rate: SMS texts have high open rates — up to 98%, according to Gartner and 82% by another source. The average open rate of email is around 20%. If you send an email with a link to a survey to find out what a consumer thinks about the virtual meeting with a lending officer they just had, it may linger in the consumers’ inbox for days, at which point the experience is no longer top-of-mind or the consumer decides to simply delete the ...