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Monday, May 17, 2004

WHAT TO WATCH
As Mortgage Rates Rise, Dreams Are Downsized
By JONATHAN FUERBRINGER







Home buyers are losing purchasing power week by week because of the surge in mortgage interest rates. Eventually, that is bound to slow down the economy.

Last week, the national average rate on a 30-year mortgage jumped to 6.34 percent, according to Freddie Mac. That is up almost a full percentage point since March 18, when the rate was 5.38 percent. In June, the average rate was only 5.21 percent, the lowest level since Freddie Mac began recording the rates in 1971.

These increases have already had a big impact on the prices people are able to pay for houses. At 5.38 percent - the March 18 weekly average - a 30-year mortgage for $200,000 means a monthly payment of $1,120.57. At the current rate of 6.34 percent, though, keeping that monthly payment means a mortgage of only $180,276.

Mortgage rates will move higher - and purchasing power will fall further - if interest rates rise as forecast. Because of the expected rate rise, the Mortgage Bankers Association predicts that sales of existing and new homes will fall modestly by the second quarter of next year, as will housing starts.

For now, though, the consensus on Wall Street is that rising interest rates have not yet led to a significant slowdown in the construction of new housing. Economists are expecting only a 1.3 percent fall in April housing starts, which the government reports this week, to an annual rate of dan, is it style to keep last zero on following?/kf 1.980 million, from 2.007 million in March, according to Bloomberg's consensus forecast. That rate is just a little below the 1.987 million average for the last six months.

LESS TO SPEND

Rising mortgage rates have already caused a plunge in the number of mortgage refinancings, which have provided Americans with billions of extra dollars to spend.

In 2003, the additional cash from refinancings totaled about $200 billion. In each refinancing where homeowners took out some cash, the extra pocket money averaged $20,000 to $30,000, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association. Since the week ending March 19, new applications for refinancing have plunged 56 percent, and they are down 78 percent from their record high at the end of May last year.

EXIT LEFT

Another casualty of the rise in interest rates has been the high-yield bond market. So far this year, the high-yield market is showing an overall loss of 1.7 percent, according to Merrill Lynch bond indexes. Since the yield on the Treasury's 10-year note began rising from its 2004 low in March, the high-yield loss has been 3.5 percent. Last year, the total return for high-yield bonds was 28.1 percent, the best ever.

Investors have taken notice. In the week ending May 12, they pulled $2.2 billion out of high-yield mutual funds, according to AMG Data Services. That is the second-biggest net weekly outflow in AMG's data history, which goes back to 1992. Compared with the same periods in earlier years, this year's net outflow through May 12 is the largest ever.


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YOUR MONEY
Insider Traders. What Makes Them Do It?
Despite the intense public scrutiny of recent celebrity insider-trading cases, Wall Street insiders - who in theory should know better than anyone - may be continuing to violate securities laws by misusing nonpublic information.

Investing: Trying to Turn Risk Into a Safety Net
With historically high stock prices and expected fall of bond prices, many financial advisers say it may be time to start looking into alternatives like hedge funds as well as mutual funds that invest in real estate and commodities.

Portfolios, Etc.: Who's Afraid of a Rate Increase?
It's easy to obsess about an interest rate increase by the Federal Reserve. But let's not overdo it: stocks fared better than many people might think in the eight periods of Fed rate increases since 1971.

Techno Files: The Twilight of the Information Middlemen
The emergence of two free information sources, blogs and weather forecasts, illustrates the Internet's impact when people or institutions decide not to charge for their work.

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FROM THE GLOSSARY
Triple Bottom Line
Taking into the account the economic, social, and environmental impact of a corporation when making an investment decision.
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ECONOMIC CALENDAR:
MAY 17 TO 21


Monday, May 17
8:30 a.m. May Empire State Manufacturing Survey. Last: 36.05
1 p.m. May Housing Market Index. Last: 69

Tuesday, May 18
7:45 a.m. ICS-UBS Store Sales Index for May 15 Week. Last: 0.3 percent
8:30 a.m. April Housing Starts. Last: 6.4 percent
8:55 a.m. Redbook Retail Sales for May 15 Week. Last: 0.7 percent

Wednesday, May 19
No major economic indicators scheduled for today.

Thursday, May 20
8:30 a.m. Initial Jobless Claims for May 15 Week. Last: 13,000
10 a.m. April Leading Economic Indicators. Last: 0.3 percent
12 p.m. May Philadelphia Federal Reserve Business Index. Last: 32.5
6:45 p.m. Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan speaks at Eisenhower Fellowships awards ceremony in Philadelphia.

Friday, May 21
No major economic indicators scheduled for today.

Source: Dow Jones
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