We know the spring buying season barely got off the ground because of elevated mortgage rates. But there are enough homes for sale to continue purchases into the summer.
Analysis by Redfin, the national real estate and housing finance entity, showed active listings still high in June, but down -8.1 percent YOY from 2021 and 2022 per the Redfin graph of active listings below.
There is enough supply (2.5 months) that median housing prices fell $50,000 last year in June, from $397,000 to less than $350k in December 2022. But prices rose again this June 2023 to $382,861, so the question is what happens next?
This always depends on supply, and builders have been playing catchup, as I’ve been saying. There are now as many new homes as existing homes for sale.
So, will supply improve enough and interest rates hold steady enough to allow prices a downward trajectory for the rest of this year, as well?
“There are two things that would jumpstart the housing market: A big drop in mortgage rates and/or a big surge of new listings,” said Redfin Deputy Chief Economist Taylor Marr. “Neither of those things happened this spring; instead, rates rose and new listings dropped to record lows. And with one or two more interest-rate hikes expected this year, mortgage rates are likely to remain elevated at least through the summer, continuing to limit both demand and supply.”
Supplies should increase because groundbreaking on U.S. single-family homebuilding projects surged in May by the most in more than three decades and permits for future construction also climbed, suggesting the housing market may be turning a corner after getting clobbered by Federal Reserve interest rate hikes.
“The May housing starts data and our latest builder confidence survey both point to a bottom forming for single-family residential construction earlier this year,” said NAHB Chief Economist Robert Dietz. “However, due to weakness at the start of the year, single-family housing starts are still down 24% on a year-to-date basis.”
What gives us hope the Fed will slow its rate hikes is consumer inflation continues to decline. U.S. consumer prices rose a modest 0.2% in June. The CPI rate of inflation slowed to the lowest level since 2021. The last time inflation was this low was in March 2021.
The overall Consumer Price Index inflation rate plunged from 4 to 3 percent in 12 months, its core rate without food and energy prices fell to 4.8 percent.
But even though there wasn’t much of a spring homebuying season this year, there was a spring building season,” Redfin’s Marr said. “That means there’s hope for more listings somewhat soon, with homebuilders working to fill the inventory bucket.”
NAR chief economist Lawrence Yun said in reaction to the good inflation report that falling gasoline prices and healthcare service costs were helpful. Rents are still climbing at a brisk pace, rising by 8.3 percent, but have turned the corner for sure. Rents were rising at 8.8 percent in the early part of the year, so this is the slowest gain in 7 months.
Rents comprise 40 percent of the Consumer Price Index, and with so many apartment units under construction, rents should continue to decline, thus improving the inflation rate and prospect for lower mortgage rates.
Harlan Green © 2023
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