Friday, June 21, 2024

How Do We Solve It?

 The Mortgage Corner

I speak of the housing shortage, as much as 2 million residential units—owner-occupied and rental units—according to housing economists. What is to be done with mortgage rates at historic highs and material shortages everywhere?

Much of it was the result of the busted housing bubble, and the overbuilding of some one million housing units in the early 2000s. The Great Recession followed, when millions more lost their homes. Construction activity ground to a halt and we are still playing catchup.

 Calculated Risk

Sales of previously owned homes in May fell 0.7% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.11 million. The stronger-than-anticipated result was still the lowest rate since January and about 20% below the long-term average for May of more than 5 million sales said Calculated Risk. It was the lowest May number since the housing market was recovering from the immediate shock of the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020.

The supply of existing homes for sale is growing slowly. At May’s sales pace, it would take 3.7 months to sell every home on the market. That is the highest in four years, according to Lawrence Yun, the Realtor’s chief economist.

“Eventually, more inventory will help boost home sales and tame home price gains in the upcoming months,” Yun said in a statement. “Increased housing supply spells good news for consumers who want to see more properties before making purchasing decisions.”

Just looking at the existing home sales graph, as many as 7 million homes were sold in early 2000 when the housing bubble peaked. Irrational exuberance reigned, and consumers thought housing prices could never fall. Sales rose again to more than 6 million units in early 2020 when interest rates plunged again during the pandemic.

Zillow the real estate data company, maintains from 2021 to 2022, the U.S. housing shortage grew to 4.5 million homes, up from 4.3 million, while in 2022 the number of U.S. families increased by 1.8 million, while only 1.4 million housing units were built.

It’s the same problem today. Privately‐owned housing starts (i.e., under construction) in May 2024 were at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of just 1,277,000. This is 5.5 percent below the revised April estimate of 1,352,000 and is 19.3 percent below the May 2023 rate of 1,583,000.

Today it is the direct result of the Fed’s inflation fight. High interest rates have

driven up the cost of everything, since real estate is dependent on borrowing large sums of money, as any homebuyer can tell you.

It’s hurting home builders, as Builder confidence in the market for newly built single-family homes was 43 in June, down two points from May, according to the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB)/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI). This is the lowest reading since December 2023.

“We are in an unusual situation because a lack of progress on reducing shelter inflation, which is currently running at a 5.4% year-over-year rate, is making it difficult for the Federal Reserve to achieve its target inflation rate of 2%,” said NAHB Chief Economist Robert Dietz.

The best way to bring down shelter inflation and push the overall inflation rate down to the 2% range is to increase the nation’s housing supply, say the builders. “A more favorable interest rate environment for construction and development loans would help to achieve this aim,” said Dietz.

The Fed can see that inflation has been tamed, as much as possible, given their predictions for strong economic growth the rest of this year. I may be overdoing the bold lettering to make such an obvious truth but what else would boost the housing supply and so reduce inflation?

Harlan Green © 2024

Follow Harlan Green on Twitter: https://twitter.com/HarlanGreen

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