This Week in Real Estate
Good Morning!
According to Realtor.com This Week in Real Estate
the median U.S. home listing price reached its all-time high in March. Purchase
mortgage rates have risen faster in the last three months than at any time in
the past 28 years. Prices continue to surge and rates are rising, but today’s
market differs significantly from the “Great Recession.” Below are a
few newsworthy events from the first week of April that influence our
business:
* Waiting On The
Housing Market To Crash? Don’t, Experts Say. Home prices are higher than they’ve ever been, and they show
no signs of stopping. The median
U.S. home listing price was $405,000 in March 2022, the first time it’s broken
the $400,000 price threshold, according to data from Realtor.com. That is an
increase of 26.5% over two years. Homebuyers might see similarities between
what’s happening today and the 2006 housing market where home prices became
increasingly unaffordable until the bubble burst. Today’s market differs significantly from what
happened 15 years ago, when high home prices were instead driven by loose
lending practices and rampant investor speculation in the market. Here’s what
is different about today’s market, what’s behind the record-high prices, and what
buyers can do to navigate the process. The previous bubble came after a
period in which lenders were more lax about writing loans and more people were
in the housing market as an investment rather than to buy a home to live in.
“Mortgage underwriting was considerably more loose back in 2006,” says Robert
Dietz, chief economist at
the National Association of Home Builders. “It was easier to get a mortgage to
speculate in the housing market. That is not the case today.” There are two major ways homes
enter the market: Somebody builds a new one or somebody sells an old one. Both
of those pipelines are a bit out of whack. “Today it’s really just about lack
of supply,” Dietz says.
Full
Story… https://time.com/nextadvisor/mortgages/mortgage-news/dont-wait-to-buy-a-home/
* Home
Affordability Gets Tougher Across The U.S. As Prices And Mortgage Rates Surge. ATTOM released its first-quarter 2022 U.S. Home Affordability
Report Thursday, showing that median-priced single-family homes are less
affordable in the first quarter compared to historical averages in 79 percent
of counties across the nation with enough data to analyze. That was up from
just 38 percent of counties that were historically less affordable in the first
quarter of 2021, to the highest point since mid-2008, as home prices continued
rising faster than wages in much of the country. “Historically low mortgage
rates and higher wages helped offset rising home prices over the past few
years, but as home prices continue to soar and interest rates approach five
percent on a 30-year fixed rate loan, more consumers are going to struggle to
find a property they can comfortably afford.”
Full Story… https://www.attomdata.com/news/market-trends/home-sales-prices/attom-q1-2022-u-s-home-affordability-report/
* Mortgage Rates
Grow At Fastest Pace Since 1994. Purchase
mortgage rates have risen faster in the last three months than at any time
since May 1994, climbing ever closer to the 5% mark due to a combination
of rising inflation, the war
in Ukraine, and disruptions to the supply chain. The latest weekly Freddie
Mac PMMS mortgage survey, released Thursday, showed that the average
purchase mortgage rate touched 4.72%, up five
basis points from the week prior. A
year ago at this time, rates were at 3.13%. Another index shows mortgage rates
even higher. Black Knight‘s Optimal Blue OBMMI pricing engine, which considers refis and data
from the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA), reported that rates on
Wednesday averaged 5.05%, up about 25 bps from a week prior. The central bank
has signaled that it will raise interest rates another six times this year and several more in 2023
to control inflation, which reached the highest level in 40 years in February,
at 7.9%.
Full Story… https://www.housingwire.com/articles/mortgage-rates-grow-at-fastest-pace-since-1994/
Have a productive week.
Jason
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