Arlington VA Real Estate Blog

Clarendon Center Mixed Use Project Gets Go Ahead
February 5th, 2008 1:49 PM

Clarendon Center Mixed Use Project

Arlington County has given developer Saul Centers Inc. the official go-ahead to demolish two city blocks in central Clarendon to make way for the new Clarendon Center mixed-use project.  The project will be divided between the northern and southern halves.  The northern portion will keep the Underwood building and add a six-story office building and 15,000 square feet of ground-floor retail.  The southern half will include a new 244 unit residential high-rise, an office tower, and 38,000 SqFt of retail.  Construction is anticipated to be completed in 2010.

The Clarendon Center will be located next to the Clarendon Metro between Wilson Blvd, N Highland St, N 11th St, and N Garfield St.


Posted by Rob Allen on February 5th, 2008 1:49 PMPost a Comment (0)

Why Fed Rate Cuts Do Not Equal Lower Mortgage Rates
February 21st, 2008 7:58 PM

Why Fed Rate Cuts Do Not Equal Lower Mortgage Rates

The Federal Reserve has been on a rate cutting spree once more. Many mortgage applicants are calling their mortgage representative and expecting a lower interest rate. Others who have been waiting to refinance are puzzled as to why mortgage rates have not moved lower during the recent five Fed rate cuts. This is difficult to explain to consumers who have watched a 2.25% reduction by the Fed with very little benefit in mortgage rates.

Is a Fed rate cut really good news for mortgage rates? The facts may be surprising. The Fed can only control the Discount Rate and the Fed Funds Rate. This is very different from mortgage rates. A mortgage rate can be in effect for 30-years while a rate set by the Fed can change from one day to another.

It is often said history repeats itself. And if history is any teacher, we can learn from what happened to mortgage rates the last time the Federal Reserve was in a rate-cutting cycle.

The last time the Fed was in a lengthy rate cutting cycle was back in 2001 from January 3, 2001 to December 11, 2001. In the span of 11 months, they cut the Fed Funds rate 11 times with eight of those cuts by 50bp. This resulted in a total of 475bp or 4.75% in short-term interest rate cuts taking the Fed Funds Rate from 6.00% down to 1.75%. Now most uninformed people would naturally think because the Fed cut rates by so much during this time that mortgage rates would follow suit and trend lower as well. Not so. Mortgage rates actually moved higher during this time of significant rate cuts because inflation, the arch enemy of bonds, gradually rose.


Posted by Rob Allen on February 21st, 2008 7:58 PMPost a Comment (0)

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Rob Allen
Long & Foster Real Estate, Inc.
4800 S. 31st Street Arlington, VA 22206
Cell: 703.867.6193 Fax: 703.379.7162 E-mail: Rob@AgentAllen.net
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