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by nostrademons
1370 days ago
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There's no cap to the amount of cash borrowed on a fixed-rate mortgage. Bay Area jumbo loans regularly top $2.5M, and during the 2020-2021 period, they had sub-3% fixed interest rates. The big difference between jumbo & conforming loans is that jumbo loans cannot be packaged off and securitized by Fannie & Freddie, and so they are largely kept on the originating financial institution's books. The reason fixed mortgage rates have been below inflation recently is because the financial industry (bond buyers and mortgage underwriters, at least) have largely bought the Fed's "transitory" narrative. A 3% mortgage remains profitable if inflation runs at 8% for a year and then returns to 2%; it becomes very unprofitable if inflation stays at 8%. The reason mortgage rates have climbed so much in the last couple months is because the "transitory" narrative has basically collapsed, and the bond markets are now starting to price an extended period of high inflation into the rates they charge. |
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I don’t know how more clearly I can state why this is a glaring subsidy for the rich. I’m sure in a free market these would just appear by themselves /s