Housing Snapshot - September 27, 2004 While the Federal Reserve continues on the path of slowly driving up interest rates, mortgage rates have remained in a narrow band around the 6% range and last week continued to decline slightly. While the Fed and others are seeing growing signs that the economy is rallying from the lethargic months of the summer, the news on the state of the economy has been mixed. The Conference Board Composite Index of Leading Economic Indicators was down for the third month in a row in August. And oil has been drawing increasingly closer to the $50 a barrel mark, largely because of the temporary interruption of production from the Gulf of Mexico by Hurricane Ivan. The lumber price front provided the housing industry with relatively good news last week, according to reports from Random Lengths. While still on the high side, the cost of framing lumber continued its recent decline and was down $24 to $407 per 1,000 board feet. The price of 15/32-inch 3-ply sheathing was down $10 to $435 per 1,000 square feet, and oriented strand board was down precipitously, falling $80 to $310, as mills held an abundant amount of the product ready for shipment. 
| Mortgage Interest Rates | | 30-Year Fixed-Rate | 5.70% | | 15-Year Fixed-Rate | 5.10% | | 1-Year ARM | 4.0% | | Housing Starts - Aug. 2004* | | Total | 2.0 million | | Single-Family Starts | 1.667 million | | Multifamily Starts | 333,000 | New Home Sales Aug. 2004* | 1.184 million | Existing Home Sales Aug. 2004* | 6.54 million | | * Seasonally adjusted annual rate |
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