This Week in Real Estate
Good Morning!
Strong consumer demand helped drive builder confidence higher in
October according to the most recent National Association of Home Builders
Housing Market Index. The National Association of Realtors also released This
Week in Real Estate that September existing-home sales realized a 7%
increase over August sales. The Mortgage Bankers Association announced their
expectations for 2022 this week, forecasting a 9% increase of purchase mortgage
originations to a record of $1.73 trillion, a 62% decrease in refinance
originations to $860 billion and the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage increasing to
4.0% by the end of 2022. Below are a few newsworthy events from the
third week of October that influence our business:
* Existing-Home
Sales Ascend 7% in September. Existing-home
sales rebounded in September after seeing sales wane the previous month,
according to the National Association of Realtors. Each of the four major U.S.
regions witnessed increases on a month-over-month basis. From a year-over-year
timeframe, one region held steady while the three others each reported a
decline in sales. Total existing-home sales rose 7.0% from August to a
seasonally adjusted annual rate of 6.29 million in September. However, sales decreased
2.3% from a year ago (6.44 million in September 2020). "Some improvement in supply during prior months
helped nudge up sales in September," said Lawrence Yun, NAR's chief economist. "Housing demand remains
strong as buyers likely want to secure a home before mortgage rates increase
even further next year." Total
housing inventory2 at the end of September amounted to 1.27
million units, down 0.8% from August and down 13.0% from one year ago (1.46
million). Unsold inventory sits at a 2.4-month supply at the present sales
pace, down 7.7% from August and down from 2.7 months in September 2020. Properties typically remained on the market for 17
days in September, unchanged from August and down from 21 days in September
2020. Eighty-six percent of homes sold in September 2021 were on the market for
less than a month. Existing-home sales in
the West climbed 6.5%, registering an annual rate of 1,310,000 in September,
down 3.0% from one year ago. The median price in the West was $506,300, up 8.3%
from September 2020.
Full Story…
https://www.nar.realtor/newsroom/existing-home-sales-ascend-7-0-in-september
* Industry Forecasts
Purchase Originations To Increase 9% to Record $1.73 Trillion in 2022. The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) recently announced
that purchase mortgage originations are expected to grow 9% to a new record of
$1.73 trillion in 2022. After an anticipated 14% decline in 2021 to $2.26
trillion, MBA expects refinance originations will slow again next year,
decreasing by 62% to $860 billion. MBA forecasts mortgage originations to total
$2.59 trillion in 2022 - a 33% decline from this year. In 2023, mortgage
originations are expected to decrease to $2.53 trillion. Purchase originations
are forecasted to reach new successive records in 2022 and 2023, while higher
mortgage rates and fewer eligible homeowners will lead to further declines in
refinance volume. According to Fratantoni, MBA’s 2022 forecast assumes
continued, strong economic growth amidst eventual easing of the supply chain
constraints that have curbed some economic activity this year. “The economy and
labor market rebounded in 2021, but overall growth fell short of expectations
because of stubborn supply chain issues that fueled faster inflation, slowed
consumer spending, and presented challenges in filling the record number of job
openings available,” he said. “With inflation elevated and the unemployment
rate dropping fast, the Federal Reserve will begin to taper its asset purchases
by the end of this year and will raise short-term rates by the end of 2022.” MBA’s baseline forecast is for mortgage rates to rise,
with the 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage expected to end 2021 at 3.1% before
increasing to 4.0% by the end of 2022. “Mortgage lenders and borrowers should expect rising mortgage rates over
the next year, as stronger economic growth pushes Treasury yields higher,” said
Fratantoni. “2022 should be another strong year for the housing market. Home
builders will have more success overcoming current building material shortages
and should be able to increase the pace of construction to meet the sizable
demand for buying,” said Fratantoni. “More newly built homes and more homeowners
listing their homes for sale should lead to some deceleration in home-price
growth next year. This is good news for the many would-be buyers who are
currently priced out or delaying decisions because of low supply conditions and
steep home-price appreciation.”
Full
Story…
https://www.rismedia.com/2021/10/18/forcasts-purchase-originations-increase-trillion-2022/
* Strong Demand
Boosts Builder Confidence Despite Supply Chain Disruptions. Strong consumer demand helped push builder confidence higher
in October despite growing affordability challenges stemming from rising
material prices and shortages. Builder sentiment in the market for newly built
single-family homes moved four points higher to 80 in October, according to the
National Association of Home Builders (NAHB)/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index.
All three major HMI indices posted gains in October. The index gauging current
sales conditions rose five points to 87, the component measuring sales
expectations in the next six months posted a three-point gain to 84 and the
gauge charting traffic of prospective buyers moved four points higher to 65.
Looking at the three-month moving averages for regional HMI scores, the Midwest
rose one point to 69, the Northeast held steady at 72, the South and West each
remained unchanged at 80 and 83, respectively.
Full Story…
https://eyeonhousing.org/2021/10/strong-demand-boosts-builder-confidence-despite-supply-chain-disruptions/
Have a productive week.
Jason
Comments
Post a Comment