Posts from April 13th, 2024

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April
13

On Saturday, April 13, 2024, the national average 30-year fixed mortgage APR is 7.10%. The national average 30-year fixed refinance APR is 7.10%, according ...

Showing results for: Single-family home, 30 year fixed and 5 year ARM mortgages with all points options.

Lender Rate
APR
Mo. payment
as of April 13, 2024
Visit Sage Home Loans site

State Lic: 4130722

4.8

6.250%

6.445%

$2,955

Visit Optimum First Mortgage site

NMLS #240415 | State Lic: 01525044

5.0

6.374%

6.553%

$2,994

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Market Survey Rates

The rates below are intended for educational purposes. The lenders listed are not active participants in Bankrate's mortgage marketplace.

San Diego County Credit Union

6.875%

6.884%

$3,153

United Fidelity Bank, fsb

7.875%

7.899%

$3,480

Bank of America

7.125%

7.252%

$3,234

Current mortgage interest rates in California

As of Saturday, April 13, 2024, current interest rates in California are 7.44% for a 30-year fixed mortgage and 6.82% for a 15-year fixed mortgage.

The median home sale price in the state was up 6.4 percent year-over-year as of December 2023, according to the California Association of Realtors. Those gains, plus today's higher mortgage rate environment, continue to make housing affordability a challenge.

Refinance rates in California

While mortgage refinance rates have more than doubled since the pandemic, many California homeowners have much more tappable equity now. With a cash-out mortgage refinance, you could take advantage of this asset to help further your financial goals.

Learn more: Why and how to do a cash-out refinance

California mortgage rate trends

While mortgage rates are difficult to predict, the current consensus is for rates to remain well above historical lows for the foreseeable future, including in California.

Learn more: Latest mortgage rate forecast

National mortgage rates by loan type

Product Interest Rate APR
30-Year Fixed Rate 7.05% 7.10%
15-Year Fixed Rate 6.53% 6.60%
5-1 ARM 6.59% 7.82%
30-Year Fixed Rate FHA 6.76% 6.81%
30-Year Fixed Rate VA 6.97% 7.01%
30-Year Fixed Rate Jumbo 7.24% 7.29%

Rates as of Saturday, April 13, 2024 at 6:30 AM

 

 

  • How Bankrate's rates are calculated

Mortgage statistics for California

With beaches, mountains and a vibrant economy, California is home to some of the nation's most expensive housing markets. Affordability is a real challenge here, but over the decades, California homeowners have been rewarded with outsized appreciation. Here are some statistics about mortgages and the housing market in The Golden State:

  • Housing inventory, Jan. 2024: 3.8% lower YoY
  • Median home sales price, Dec. 2023: $819,740
  • Homeownership rate, Q4 2023: 56%

Sources: California Association of Realtors, U.S. Census Bureau

Mortgage options in California

There are plenty of mortgage options in California. The most common types of loans include:

  • California conventional mortgages: Rates and requirements will vary depending on the area you want to live in and your financial situation. You can compare mortgage rates to find the option that's right for you.
  • CalHFA: The California Housing Finance Agency (CalHFA) offers state residents access to mortgages, as well as smaller loans designed to help with down payment or closing costs. To get started, borrowers can contact a CalHFA-approved lender or preferred loan officer.
  • California FHA loans: Home loans backed by the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) are offered throughout the U.S. While the FHA doesn't offer loans directly, you can find one through an FHA-approved lender in California. They are offered to first-time homebuyers, defined as those that have not purchased a home in the past two years, as well as repeat buyers. FHA loans are generally designed for low- to moderate-income borrowers with lower credit scores.
  • California VA loans: Guaranteed by the Department of Veterans Affairs, VA loans are offered to eligible veterans and active-duty service members. While the VA doesn't offer loans directly, you can find one through a VA-approved lender in California. They require no down payment and typically have lower interest rates than conventional mortgages.

 

April
13

Housing affordability for all Californians deteriorates
as interest rates set record highs, C.A.R. reports

Affordability gap for Black and Hispanic/Latino households remains wide

  • Less than one in five of all Californians earned enough income to support the purchase of an $813,980 statewide median-priced home in 2023, down from just over one in five from 2022.
  • By ethnic groups, about one-fifth of White California households and less than one in 10 Black and Hispanic/Latino California households could afford the same median-priced home, while 28 percent of Asians could buy a median-priced home.
  • Assuming a 20 percent down payment on a $813,890 median-priced home, a minimum annual income of $204,800 was needed to make monthly payments of $4,190, including principal, interest, and taxes at 30-year fixed-rate mortgage at a 6.66 percent interest rate.

Multimedia:     2023 Housing Affordability by Ethnicity slides
                       2023 Housing Affordability by Ethnicity motiongraphic           

LOS ANGELES (April 11) – Housing affordability continued to deteriorate for all ethnic home-buying groups last year as interest rates rose higher and the typical mortgage payment for a median-priced home climbed from a year ago, theCALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (C.A.R.) said today.

Eghteen percent of all Californians earned the minimum income needed to purchase a home in 2023, down from 21 percent in 2022. At the same time, housing affordability for White/non-Hispanic households fell from 25 percent in 2022 to 21 percent in 2023. Nine percent of Black and Hispanic/Latino households could afford the same median-priced home in 2023, down from 11 percent for both ethnic groups. The significant difference in housing affordability for Black and Hispanic/Latino households illustrates the homeownership gap and wealth disparity for communities of color, which could worsen as the economy slows and rates remain elevated in 2024. Housing affordability was better for Asians but also declined from the prior year, with the index registering 28 percent of Asian homebuyers who could afford the median-priced home in 2023, down from 32 percent in 2022, according to C.A.R.'s Housing Affordability Index.

Housing affordability gaps narrowed last year but remained wide as interest rates continued to climb while home prices stayed relatively flat. The affordability gap between Blacks and the overall population in California improved from 9.7 percentage points in 2022 to 8.5 percentage points in 2023, and the gap for Hispanics/Latinos improved from 9.6 percentage points in 2022 to 8.9 percentage points in 2023.

According to the Census Bureau's American Community Survey, the 2022 homeownership rate for all Californians was 54 percent, 64 percent for non-Hispanic Whites, 59 percent for Asians, 45 percent for Hispanics/Latinos and 35 percent for Blacks.

With Black and Latino households having much less wealth than the national average, C.A.R. last year urged the state to fully fund the California Dream For All Shared Appreciation Loan assistance program, which provides a loan for 20 percent of the home purchase price, in the California 2023-2024 state budget. This program will help bridge down payment and closing cost hurdles that people of color often experience more acutely and allow many working Californians to get on the housing ladder and gain the benefits of homeownership.

Additionally, in an effort to address California's growing housing affordability crisis and racial homeownership divide, C.A.R. has partnered with nonprofit housing organizations to provide closing cost grants up to $10,000 for eligible first-time home buyers from an underserved community. Since 2022, C.A.R.'s Housing Affordability Fund's Pathway to Homeownership Closing Cost Assistance grant program has provided closing cost grants totaling $2 million for 208 first-time home buyer households from an underserved community throughout California. By the end of 2024, C.A.R. expects to have provided a total of $3 million to more than 300 first-time home buyer households since inception of the Pathway to Homeownership Closing Cost Assistance program.

A minimum annual income of $204,800 was needed to qualify for the purchase of a $813,980 statewide median-priced, existing single-family home in 2023. The monthly payment, including taxes and insurance on a 30-year, fixed-rate loan, would be $4,190, assuming a 20 percent down payment and an effective composite interest rate of 6.66 percent. The 2023 California median income for Whites was $103,870, $120,630 for Asians, $75,950 for Hispanics/Latinos and $63,800 for Blacks — an income gap of nearly one-third that of the overall population, which was $92,420.

C.A.R.'s Housing Affordability Index (HAI) measures the percentage of households that can afford to purchase a median-priced, single-family home in California. C.A.R. also reports affordability indices for regions and select counties within the state. The index is considered the most fundamental measure of housing well-being for home buyers in the state.

Key points from C.A.R.'s 2023 Housing Affordability by Ethnicity report include:

  • Of the major counties for which C.A.R. tracks affordability by ethnicity, the affordability gap between Black and the overall population in 2023 was the largest in Contra Costa (-15 percent), San Francisco (-15 percent) and Fresno (-13 percent) counties. Other counties that had a double-digit affordability gap for Black households include Alameda (-12 percent), Santa Clara (-10 percent) and San Mateo (-10 percent). The affordability gaps between Black and the overall population at the state and the nation were -9 percent and -14 percent, respectively.

     

  • For Hispanic/Latino households, the affordability gap was the biggest in Santa Clara (-11 percent), Contra Costa (-10 percent), Alameda (-9 percent) and Solano (-9 percent).The affordability gaps between Hispanic/Latino and the overall population at the state and the nation were -9 percent and -7 percent, respectively.

     

  • At an affordability index of 6 percent, San Francisco and San Diego were the least affordable counties for Black households, while Kern and San Joaquin were the most affordable counties at 29 percent and 24 percent, respectively.

     

  • The least affordable counties in 2023 for Hispanic/Latino homebuyers were Los Angeles (7 percent) and Orange County (7 percent), and the most affordable was Kern at 29 percent.

     

  • For Asian households, Orange County was also the least affordable, with 15 percent earning the minimum income required to buy a median-price home. Kern was the most affordable county with 55 percent of Asian households having the minimum income required to buy a median-priced home.

     

  • Orange County was the least affordable county for non-Hispanic White households, with 16 percent earning the minimum income required to buy a median-price home. Fresno was the most affordable at 43 percent.

Leading the way…® in California real estate for more than 118 years, the CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (www.car.org) is one of the largest state trade organizations in the United States with more than 200,000 members dedicated to the advancement of professionalism in real estate. C.A.R. is headquartered in Los Angeles.

# # #

CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®
2023 Traditional Housing Affordability Index by Ethnicity

2023

 

C.A.R. Traditional Housing Affordability Index

STATE/REGION/COUNTY

All

White, Non- Hispanic

Asian

Hispanic/ Latino

Black

Median Home Price

Monthly Payment Including Taxes & Insurance*

Minimum Qualifying Income

Calif. Single-family home

18

21

28

9

9

$813,980

$5,120

$204,800

Calif. Condo/Townhome

26

31

38

16

15

$640,000

$4,030

$161,200

United States

38

41

54

31

24

$394,100

$2,480

$99,200

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

San Francisco Bay Area

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Alameda

19

21

25

10

7

$1,225,000

$7,710

$308,400

Contra Costa

25

29

35

15

11

$850,000

$5,350

$214,000

San Francisco

21

26

18

17

6

$1,562,500

$9,830

$393,200

San Mateo

17

19

20

10

8

$1,960,000

$12,330

$493,200

Santa Clara

20

21

25

8

9

$1,765,000

$11,110

$444,400

Solano

27

30

39

18

22

$586,000

$3,690

$147,600

Southern California

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Los Angeles

14

22

18

7

8

$833,380

$5,240

$209,600

Orange

13

16

15

7

7

$1,260,000

$7,930

$317,200

Riverside

23

26

30

18

20

$612,000

$3,850

$154,000

San Bernardino

31

34

41

27

23

$475,000

$2,990

$119,600

San Diego

14

16

21

8

6

$931,200

$5,860

$234,400

Central Valley

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fresno

33

43

39

26

20

$410,000

$2,580

$103,200

Kern

34

39

55

29

29

$379,000

$2,380

$95,200

Sacramento

28

30

34

23

21

$527,086

$3,320

$132,800

San Joaquin

29

32

38

21

24

$535,000

$3,370

$134,800

Stanislaus

19

24

19

14

15

$460,000

$2,890

$115,600

* Assumes 20 percent downpayment

April
13

Growers Encouraged to Attend Annual Commission Meeting
and Provide Feedback

 

California avocado growers are encouraged to attend one of the California Avocado Commission's Annual Meetings, which will take place April 15 – April 17 in Escondido, Ventura and San Luis Obispo.

 

During the meetings attendees will receive the latest industry updates, meet CAC's leadership, learn more about the 2024 grower-focused marketing campaign and gain insight into the priorities of the Production Research and Industry Affairs teams. Attendees also will be able to provide feedback throughout the sessions.

 

The sessions will be held as follows:

 

April 15, 9:00 – 11:00 a.m.

Center for the Arts

340 N. Escondido Blvd.

Escondido, CA

 

April 16, 9:00 – 11:00 a.m.

Museum of Ventura County

100 E. Main St.

Ventura, CA

 

April 17, 9:00 ­­­– 11:00 a.m.

SLO Farm Bureau

4875 Morabito Place

San Luis Obispo, CA

 

In addition, growers are encouraged to complete an in-depth industry survey and provide CAC with grower input and priorities. Data from this survey will be used to guide CAC's strategic planning during its June meeting.

California Avocado Commission 
12 Mauchly, Suite L 
Irvine, CA 92618
cac.iaf@avocado.org
949-341-1955

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