The Mortgage Bankers Association’s Purchase Index, a measure of mortgage loan application volume for home purchases in the U.S., has fallen to its lowest level since September of 2011 on a seasonally adjusted basis. On a non-adjusted basis, the Purchase Index is down 17 percent year-over-year, as it was at the beginning of February.
As we noted two weeks ago, while a lack of inventory is certain to be blamed for holding back applications, according to the National Association of Realtors’ own data, inventory levels are up on a year-over-year basis, with 1.86 million existing homes on the market at the end of December versus 1.82 million homes on the market at the end of 2012.

2 thoughts on “Purchase Loan Activity At Lowest Level Since September 2011”
  1. The banks are finally unloading their pent-up shadow foreclosure inventory because the institutional speculators are heading for the exit.

  2. Hey, lower interest rates and/or devise loans so people with lots of equity can borrow w/o that limiting 43% DTI (which doesn’t work well for self employed, heavily asset boasted, etc.) and then you’ll get more loan business. Simple!

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