Tuesday, August 27, 2024

When Will Housing Recover--Part II

 The Mortgage Corner

Federal Reserve Chair Powell has said the Fed is about to cut interest rates, so I’ve been wondering if the housing industry can come out of its self-made recession?

One good sign is that existing-home sales ticked up for the first time in July, after falling steadily since the recent annual rate high of 4.4 million in February 2024.

The NAR said, “Total existing-home sales[1] – completed transactions that include single-family homes, townhomes, condominiums and co-ops – ascended 1.3% from June to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 3.95 million in July.” (But) Year-over-year, sales fell 2.5% (down from 4.05 million in July 2023), so that’s not much of an improvement.

This could be the beginning of an upward trend in overall sales, but the question now is not so much about mortgage rates, which will help sales and affordability, but an adequate housing supply to get sales back to the 4-5 million sales that prevailed in decades past and kept a much higher supply of for sale housing on the market.

Cutting interest rates is a start but the building industry for various reasons has been reluctant to build enough new homes for decades—ever since the Great Recession of 2008-09 and busted housing bubble.

This is just one of the ways Americans have been paying for the excesses of the Great Recession since then. The housing shortage may be its most pernicious result.

Calculated Risk’s graph of existing sales portrays the damage done by the Great Recession (middle gray bar in graph). Sales had reached a 7 million annual rate in 2005 at the height of the housing bubble, then plunged to 4 million units during the Great Recession and slowly rose to more than 5 million units annually until the COVID-19 pandemic.

More than one million excess units were built during the bubble, as Greenspan’s Federal Reserve attempted to goose sales any way they could to stimulate slowing economic growth while the Bush administration was fighting the Iraq and Afghanistan wars on terror.

The housing supply should be improving in anticipation of the Fed’s rate cuts that would bring down the cost of everything that goes into building new homes.

Sales of newly built homes in the U.S. just increased 10.6% in July to an annual rate of 739,000, up from a revised 668,000 in the prior month, the Commerce Department reported Friday. It was the highest sales rate in more than one year.

For-sale inventories have also edged up some 40 percent this year, as existing homeowners now see a chance to either move to a smaller unit, or into a retirement home now that mortgage rates are declining..

We still have a housing shortage of somewhere between 1-3 million residential dwellings, including owner-occupied and rental units, without considering housing for the homeless.

Another culprit of the housing shortage has been lenders that have become more conservative since the housing bubble. A credit score of 680 was acceptable to Fannie and Freddie for their best conventional mortgage rates prior to the Great Recession, whereas it is above 720 today, which means fewer home buyers are eligible for good loans.

It is really the Fed’s job to require banks to ease their credit standards in this case. Its inaction has only made matters worse for homebuyers (and therefore renters) with the housing shortage.

Now that Chairman Powell just announced that rate cuts are in the works—probably to begin at the Fed’s September FOMC meeting—they should use some of the other tools within their powers—such as requiring more affordable loan programs for entry-level homebuyers, as well as easing banks’ credit standards.

"The time has come for policy to adjust. The direction of travel is clear," Powell said in his speech to the central bank's summer retreat in Jackson Hole.

Let’s see if Powell means what he says and the Fed really wants to help cure the housing shortage.

Harlan Green © 2024

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

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