The Fed wants to cool the U.S. housing market. Here's what that feels
like
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[May 02, 2022] By
Ann Saphir and Lindsay Dunsmuir
(Reuters) - In mid-April, months into an
increasingly frustrating house hunt, Harsh Grewal and his wife settled
on a place in a San Francisco suburb and were prepping a bid, above the
listed price so they'd have a chance of besting other offers in one of
the nation's hottest housing markets.
Then he checked his phone and saw several alerts, all touting reduced
prices for other homes they'd been tracking. The Grewals pulled their
offer and put their search on ice in hopes it was a sign the market was
finally cooling. "I want to see where this goes, and where the dust
settles," Grewal said.
That's exactly what Federal Reserve policymakers hope to see more of as
they raise interest rates to bring down 40-year high inflation.
One leg of their effort is taking the heat out of the housing market,
where low borrowing costs introduced to cushion the economy from the
COVID-19 pandemic helped fuel a 35% rise in home prices over the past
two years. While house prices are not part of the inflation indexes the
Fed tracks, they do feed into other factors - such as rents - that are
influential to inflation.
Rising rates mean borrowing for a house is suddenly more expensive. The
10-year Treasury note yield, a benchmark for mortgage rates, has risen
on expectations of swift Fed rate hikes. The average 30-year-fixed home
loan rate is now 5.37%, up more than 2 percentage points since the year
began, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.
So buyers of a typical existing home, which went for $375,000 in March,
will pay $440 more each month than they would have in December, if they
put 20% down and borrow the rest at a fixed rate for a 30-year term.
Higher interest rates account for most of that. Meanwhile inflation is
also driving up grocery bills and gasoline costs.
"The housing market is definitely out of whack," said Fed Governor
Christopher Waller, who recounted last month how he sold his St. Louis
home to an all-cash buyer with no inspection. "We'll see how the
interest rates start cooling things off going forward."
New homebuyers face sharply higher costs https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-FED/HOUSING/jnvwerjrevw/chart.png
'AN INFLECTION POINT'
The last time mortgage rates rose this fast was in the spring of 1994.
Total home sales fell 20% as the Fed lifted rates, and home price growth
slowed.
Economists predict a sales drop and slowing price growth this time, too,
perhaps to a roughly 5% annual rate by year end.
But an unprecedented collection of factors, including record-low housing
stock, unusually high household savings, an extremely tight job market
and increased worker mobility are creating crosscurrents that could blow
that forecast off course.
Sales of previously owned homes were the lowest in nearly two years in
March, according to the National Association of Realtors. Mortgage
applications are down as well.
List-price drops like those the Grewals noticed are more common,
accounting for 13% of homes for sale in the four weeks from mid-March to
mid-April, according to real estate company Redfin, up from 9% a year
earlier.
At the same time, mortgage applications remain above pre-COVID levels,
and house prices hit a record as homes were snatched up typically within
17 days of listing.
Some of that could be a last-gasp effort of buyers, particularly those
with pre-approved financing, racing to purchase homes before rates go
even higher.
"The next couple of months things are going to heat up until we get to
an inflection point," probably this summer, Zillow Economist Nicole
Bachaud said.
The soaring cost of home loans https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-FED/HOUSING/byvrjnrlxve/chart.png
THIS TIME IS DIFFERENT?
The correlation between house price growth and mortgage rates, while
still strong, has been declining though over the past 20 years, said
Anne Thompson, a lecturer and research scientist at MIT who recently
co-authored a paper with Yale University's Robert Shiller arguing that
soaring prices do not appear to reflect a bubble.
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A "For Sale" sign is posted outside a residential home in the Queen
Anne neighborhood near the Space Needle in Seattle, Washington, U.S.
May 14, 2021. REUTERS/Karen Ducey/File Photo
"I wouldn't even necessarily call it a cooling, I'd call it a flattening of
rates of appreciation, but not this year because there are still relatively low
interest rates," Thompson said, noting that mortgage rates have historically
been much higher.
Many regional markets remain very hot, particularly in the South, helped by
buyers having more flexibility on where they work as well as strong wage gains
amid a shortage of workers.
Those factors may also bolster housing sales even if higher rates take some of
the steam out of price rises.
Rob Lubow, 35, and his husband worked remotely from their two-bedroom Austin,
Texas, rental apartment until late last year when Lubow's firm began calling
employees back to the office.
In January Lubow began looking for a new job that would let him work from home
permanently. A month later he had one - and a 35% salary increase.
Austin home prices had climbed way above their $300,000 maximum reach. The
median home price was $624,000 in March, up from $415,000 two years earlier,
data from the Austin Board of Realtors shows.
Their remote-only jobs meant mobility, so last month they bought a three-bedroom
house in Kingston, New York, for just under their budget. The median home price
there is $280,000, according to Redfin, up almost 20% since last year.
"If people respond to higher housing costs by moving to more affordable places,
that could lead to more home sales," Redfin Chief Economist Daryl Fairweather
said.
A near-record low number of homes are for sale https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/dwpkryrmavm/chart.png
'INSANE'
Record low inventory over the past couple of years also means there is plenty of
pent-up demand, particularly among Millennials ready to set up a home, whose
share of purchases has been growing. But that is bumping up against Boomers,
discouraged from downsizing by the rising costs of alternative housing, staying
put and keeping the larger homes desired by younger people off the market at a
time when too-few new homes are being built.
Meanwhile, data from the Realtors group shows the share of all-cash sales was
the largest in nearly eight years in March, a sign supply is being gobbled up by
institutional investors or second-home buyers.
Mike Wang, 33, works at a vitamin manufacturer and rents a Los Angeles
apartment. He's had a number of promotions and now makes 50% more than he did
three years ago. "Even with making more money than I could have hoped for when I
was 20-something, house prices have far outpaced that – which when I think about
that I'm like, holy cow, that is insane."
So Wang says he sees little choice but to wait in the hope prices slow as
predicted and he can catch up enough to buy a house in a few years.
With so many people his age wanting to buy homes, and so few houses being built,
he's not convinced it will happen that way.
"Having been surprised in the past, I wouldn't be surprised to see things buck
all the analyst forecasts," Wang said.
(Reporting by Ann Saphir and Lindsay Dunsmuir; Editing by Dan Burns and Andrea
Ricci)
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