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Bankrate: 30-year Fixed Mortgage Rate Jumps To 6.41%

 
Michael Kitchen
MarketWatch Pulse
     

    NEW YORK -- Mortgage rates increased for the third consecutive week, despite benchmark Treasury yields being largely unchanged versus one week ago, Bankrate.com reported Thursday. The average 30-year fixed mortgage rate rose to 6.41% from 6.32% the previous week with an average of 0.42 discount and origination points. The average 15-year fixed-rate mortgage popular for refinancing notched higher to 6.14% from 6.11%, while the average jumbo 30-year fixed-rate climbed to 7.65%. Adjustable mortgage rates were mixed, with the average one-year ARM sharply lower at 6.04%, but the average 5/1 ARM jumping to 6.49%. This year has been a wild ride for mortgage rates, with a low in January of 5.57% and a high of 6.77% in July, Bankrate said.

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    Street Name

    It's time to let you in on a dirty little secret: You may not own the stock you own. That's right, if you invest with a brokerage firm, the shares you bought are almost certainly not held in your name. Technically, they're held in the name of the Wall Street firm you do business with, hence the term "street name."

    No, you haven't been robbed. Ultimately, the decision to hold shares on the books under a different name doesn't affect the economic ramifications for you. You¿re listed as the "beneficial owner," even though the firm is the official owner of the shares. But, you are giving up some rights, and investors concerned about good corporate governance might want to get that stock back in their own names.

    Here's the problem: If your stock is technically owned by, say, Merrill Lynch, then Merrill Lynch gets to do things with it that might work against your wishes. Take short selling. Investors who want to sell shares short need to first borrow those shares. The lenders are often the big Wall Street firms that are handing out Street-name shares. So, if you feel that a company you own is a victim of aggressive short selling, chances are your own shares are being used to fuel the shorting.

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    The good news is that you can easily fix the Street name problem: Just request that your brokerage firm makes you the listed owner of the shares. If they refuse, find a new firm.