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U.S. average 30-year mortgage rate back up over 3% this week

ASSOCIATED PRESS / SEPT. 21
                                This is a home sold in Mount Lebanon, Pa. Sales of previously occupied U.S. homes bounced back in September to their strongest pace since January as the prospect of higher mortgage rates motivated buyers to get off the sidelines. The National Association of Realtors said Thursday, Oct. 21, that existing homes sales rose 7% last month from August to a seasonally-adjusted annual rate of 6.29 million units.
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ASSOCIATED PRESS / SEPT. 21

This is a home sold in Mount Lebanon, Pa. Sales of previously occupied U.S. homes bounced back in September to their strongest pace since January as the prospect of higher mortgage rates motivated buyers to get off the sidelines. The National Association of Realtors said Thursday, Oct. 21, that existing homes sales rose 7% last month from August to a seasonally-adjusted annual rate of 6.29 million units.

SILVER SPRING, Md. >> The average long-term U.S. mortgage rate rose this week, with the main 30-year rate inching back up over 3%.

Mortgage buyer Freddie Mac reported Thursday that the average rate on the 30-year benchmark home loan jumped to a still-low 3.1% from 2.98% last week. A year ago at this time the rate was 2.72%.

The rate for a 15-year loan, popular with homeowners refinancing their mortgages, rose to 2.39% from 2.27% last week. It stood at 2.28% a year ago.

As the job market has improved and demand for products and services continues to be red-hot, the Federal Reserve earlier this month said it would keep its main borrowing rate near zero but begin dialing back the extraordinary stimulus it has provided since the coronavirus pandemic erupted last year.

Robust consumer demand and ongoing supply shortages have pushed prices higher for almost everything, chipping away at recent gains in wages and salaries for workers. The government reported last week that prices for U.S. consumers jumped 6.2% in October compared with a year earlier, leading to the highest inflation rate since 1990.

The housing market has been hamstrung by a lack of supply even before the pandemic broke in early 2020. That lack of supply, along with materials and labor shortages, has pushed new and existing home prices up by more than 10% in the past year and as much as 33% in some areas in the West.

Despite the historically low interest rates, the lack of supply combined with a surge in prices for homes has left many would-be buyers empty-handed.

Earlier Thursday, the Labor Department reported that the number of Americans applying for unemployment benefits fell for the seventh straight week to a pandemic low of 268,000. Since April 2020, employers have hired more than 18 million people, including 531,000 last month. But the U.S. economy is still more than 4 million jobs short of where it was in February last year.

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