- Greenspan focussiert: Hypothekensätze, Immobilienblase - GREAT CRASH ahead? - dottore, 16.07.2003, 14:57
- Re: Schrumpfung von 1,6 Billionen auf 750 Milliarden bis 2004 - Theo Stuss, 16.07.2003, 17:54
- Re: Danke, passt perfekt! Weniger Refi = weniger Konsumnachfrage und PENG (owT) - dottore, 16.07.2003, 17:59
- Frage - GREAT CRASH ahead? - daxput, 16.07.2003, 18:06
- Re: Frage - GREAT CRASH ahead? - dottore, 16.07.2003, 18:33
- Re: Frage - GREAT CRASH ahead? - Euklid, 16.07.2003, 19:30
- Re: Frage - GREAT CRASH ahead? / Hyperinfla D 1914 - 1923: Link... - -- Elli --, 16.07.2003, 21:22
- Re: Frage - GREAT CRASH ahead? - dottore, 16.07.2003, 18:33
- Re: Greenspan focussiert: Hypothekensätze, Immobilienblase - GREAT CRASH ahead? - CRASH_GURU, 16.07.2003, 19:04
- Re: Falsch Sicht, sorry - dottore, 17.07.2003, 11:18
- Re: Falsch Sicht, sorry- NEIN falsch interpretiert... - CRASH_GURU, 18.07.2003, 12:08
- Re: Falsch Sicht, sorry - dottore, 17.07.2003, 11:18
- Re: cash out - Cosa, 16.07.2003, 20:13
- Re: Greenspans letzte Patrone - dottore, 17.07.2003, 10:47
- Re: Schrumpfung von 1,6 Billionen auf 750 Milliarden bis 2004 - Theo Stuss, 16.07.2003, 17:54
Re: Schrumpfung von 1,6 Billionen auf 750 Milliarden bis 2004
-->War schon gestern oder vorgestern, passt aber genau hier hin:
Bloomberg News, The Associated Press
July 10, 2003
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the largest U.S. mortgage buyers, forecast that refinancing will fall by at least half in 2004 as lower interest rates are set to push this year's level to a record.
Refinancing volume will drop to about $850 billion from $2.60 trillion this year, Fannie Mae chief economist David Berson said in an interview ahead of a monthly report scheduled for next week.
Washington-based Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, of McLean, Va., expect the average 30-year fixed mortgage rate to rise to 5.6 percent in 2004 compared with 5.5 percent this year.
Refinancing has bolstered consumer spending in a sluggish economy as homeowners reduce monthly payments by locking in lower rates, giving them more cash to spend on cars, vacations and renovations.
- Bloomberg News
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