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After a two-week selloff, Treasury bond are starting to stage a comeback today (Tuesday) as investors review the latest inflation data.

On Tuesday morning, the government reported that the Producer Price Index (PPI), a measure of prices at the wholesale level, rose by 0.4 percent last month. That’s the same level at which it increased in August and September, and below analysts’ expectations for 0.8 percent growth.

Investors will now turn to the Consumer Price Index (CPI), which comes out tomorrow morning (Wednesday). Analysts also expect that the CPI will reveal dangerously low levels of inflation.

Bond traders watch inflation data very closely, as expectations for how quickly prices rise over the long term could compete with the low yields on government bonds.

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Here we go again.  Baltimore mortgage rates on fixed mortgages dropped to record lows this week after the Federal Reserve unveiled its huge bond-buying program to help stimulate economic growth.

Freddie Mac says that the average rate on 30-year fixed loans fell to the lowest level on record dating back to 1971.

The average rate on 15-year fixed loans fell the lowest levels since the survey began in 1991.

The Federal Reserve unveiled plans last week to purchase $600 billion in Treasury bonds. On Wednesday, the central bank elaborated on that plan, saying that it hopes to buy $105 billion in Treasurys over the next month. The increased demand means that Treasurys will produce lower yields for investors. Mortgage rates often move along with those bond yields.

Rates on five-year ARMs hit their lowest levels since January 2005.  Rates on one-year ARMs were unchanged.

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Baltimore mortgage rates mostly fell this week, with short-term adjustable-rate mortgage again hitting record lows, although the average on 30-year, fixed-rate mortgages edged up for the third straight week, according to Freddie Mac‘s weekly survey.

The short-term rates Freddie tracks—for five-year and one-year Treasury-indexed hybrid adjustable-rate mortgages—hit the lowest levels since the mortgage financier began tracking them in January 2005 and January 1984, respectively.

Rates have been slumping for months, setting record lows in the process, as yields on Treasurys slid amid economic uncertainty. Mortgage rates generally track yields, which move inversely to Treasury prices.

The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 4.24 percent for the week ended Thursday, up from the prior week’s 4.23 percent average but down from 4.98 percent a year ago. The average for 15-year fixed was 3.63 percent, down from 3.66 percent and 4.40 percent, respectively.

Five-year Treasury-indexed hybrid adjustable-rate mortgages averaged 3.39 percent, down from the prior week’s 3.41 percent and 4.35 percent a year earlier. One-year Treasury-indexed ARMs were 3.26 percent, dropping from 3.3 percent last week and 4.47 percent a year ago.

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