FINANCING
Rates on 30-year mortgages rose above 5 percent this week, ending a five-week run at record low levels, Freddie Mac reported Thursday.
 
30-Year Mortgages Hit Record Low (Post, January 17, 2009, Page G02)
 
Falling to 5.01 Percent, 30-Year Rates Hit Another Record Low (Post, January 10, 2009, Page F08)
 
30-Year Rates Set Another Record Low (Post, January 3, 2009, Page F05)
 
30-Year Rate Falls to New Record Low (Post, December 27, 2008, Page F06)
 
30-Year Loan Rates at 37-Year Low (Post, December 20, 2008, Page F04)
 
30-Year Rates Fall to Four-Year Low (Post, December 13, 2008, Page G02)
 
Long-Term-Loan Rates Plummet (Post, December 6, 2008, Page G02)
 
30-Year Mortgage Rates Fall Below 6% (Post, November 29, 2008, Page F05)
 
Mortgage Rates Continue to Fall (Post, November 22, 2008, Page G02)
 
30-Year Rate Drops to 6.14% (Post, November 15, 2008, Page G02)
 
Rates Drop as Economy Falters (Post, November 8, 2008, Page G02)
 
Loan Rates Swing Sharply Upward (Post, November 1, 2008, Page G02)
 
30-Year Rates Fall Sharply (Post, October 25, 2008, Page G02)
 
30-Year Rates at 8-Week High (Post, October 18, 2008, Page G02)
 
30-Year Rates Fall Below 6% As Market Turbulence Continues (Post, October 11, 2008, Page G02)
 
30-Year Rates Inch Up to 6.10 Percent (Post, October 4, 2008, Page G02)
 
30-Year Rates Jump Above 6 Percent (Post, September 27, 2008, Page G02)
 
30-Year Rates Dip to 5.78 Percent (Post, September 20, 2008, Page G02)
 
30-Year Rates Drop to 6.35 Percent (Post, September 6, 2008, Page G02)
 
30-Year Rates Dip Again, to 6.40 Percent (Post, August 30, 2008, Page F07)
 
30-Year Rates Dip to 6.47 Percent (Post, August 23, 2008, Page G02)
 
30-Year Rates Hold Steady; Other Loans Post Declines (Post, August 16, 2008, Page G02)
 
30-Year Loan Rates Hold Steady (Post, August 9, 2008, Page G02)
 
30-Year Rates Dip to 6.52 Percent (Post, August 2, 2008, Page G02)
 
More News
© 2009 Washingtonpost.Newsweek Interactive