There’s an overwhelming amount of data and headlines circulating. This column is my attempt to make sense of it all for you, the real estate professional, from an overall economic standpoint.
Well, we have lots to talk about this month, so let’s get straight to it. First off, let’s take a look at the February existing home sales numbers.
Inventory of homes for sale
As you can see in the top chart, the number of homes for sale was measured at just over 1 million units. This is a woefully low number and one that we haven’t seen since the National Association of Realtors (NAR) started to gather data on listing inventory.
The bottom chart shows home sales, and they fell by 6.6 percent month over month in February to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 6.22 million units, but they were still 9.1 percent higher than a year ago.
Why the drop? Well, I’m putting the blame squarely on the shoulders of homesellers who, quite frankly, simply aren’t selling!
Median sale price of existing homes
Looking at sale prices, they ticked higher in February to a median of $313,000. That matches the all-time high seen last October and is 15.8 percent higher than we saw a year ago.
This is the fastest annual pace of price growth seen since August of 2005, but I have to add that the number is a little deceiving as it was skewed higher by significant growth at the upper end of the market, with sales above $750,000 accounting for close to 10 percent of all sales in February and sales above $1 million up by a whopping 81 percent when compared to a year ago.
The numbers also showed that homes took an average of just 20 days to turn pending (another record), and 74 percent of homes sold in less than one month.
Individual investors or second homebuyers purchased 17 percent of all homes sold in February, and that’s up from 15 percent in January and matches the share seen a year ago. Now, as we move through the year, there are a couple of things worth noting.
We all know that the market is tight, but I still expect total sales this year to come in at around 6.3 million units — this is lower than my forecast from the start of the year, but it would still represent an 11.6 percent increase over 2020.
Although these are not numbers from NAR, I did want to share with you some different data does relate directly to the increase in sale prices that we have just discussed.
With the significant upswing in sale prices that we have seen over the past eight or so years, over 30 percent of all homeowners in America currently have more than 50 percent equity in their homes — and this is a massive figure.
But across the country, there are significant variances, as you can see here.
The largest share of homeowners who are equity rich live in Vermont and California, but many West Coast markets are not far behind with significant owner equity seen in Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Utah and Colorado. These really are very impressive numbers.
Mortgage Rages
It’s time to take a look at mortgage rates, as a lot has been going on in that space too since we last talked.
This chart shows the average weekly rate for 15- and 30-year conforming mortgages, and as you can see, rates started to jump in early February, and I find it very unlikely that they will drop back down at any time soon.
I’m sorry, folks, but the days of 30-year rates starting with a 2 percent rate, well they are now firmly in the rearview mirror. So what has caused this spike?
Well, it’s very simple. COVID-19 case counts are dropping. The distribution of a vaccine is going remarkably well. As I speak, over 130 million doses have been given, and over 46.4 million people are now fully vaccinated against COVID-19.
But there is a fear that that – with the country starting to reopen — we will see a significant boost in economic activity which, in concert with the latest round of stimulus payments, has generated rumblings from some economists who are now looking to see inflation take off.
As much as it’s great news that we are seeing a better-than-expected rollout of the vaccine, which will lead to faster economic growth in the second half of the year, the potential for inflation to rise is now elevated.
This has caused a move out of bonds, specifically 10-year treasuries, which means that the interest rate for these bonds has to rise. The interest rate on 10-year paper directly impacts mortgage rates, specifically the rate on the ever-popular 30-year mortgage. But before everyone starts getting panicked about this, look at it this way.
Even at 3.17 percent, rates remain remarkably low. Yes, the current rate was last seen in June of 2020, but it is still well below the long-term average.
However, that said, and given the upward move in treasury yields, I have had to rerun my forecast models for mortgage rates, and here is where I see rates trending this year.
Average 30-year mortgage rate history and forecast
I expect that we will see rates rise to an average of 3.6 percent by the fourth quarter of 2021, and looking farther out, we will likely break back above 4 percent in early to mid 2022.
Now, I could actually be a little optimistic if — and it’s a big “if” — 10-year bond yields rise faster than I’m forecasting, but for now, I don’t see that happening unless, of course, inflation really does take off. But again, I don’t see that.
That said, I’m looking for a spike in inflation in the next few months as we feel more comfortable going out again, and we start to spend our money in a more normal manner, but I believe that inflation will level off and not get out of control.
However, if it does, then more bond buyers will head further out along the yield curve and buy longer-duration treasuries to counter inflation, which will mean that the interest rates on 10-year treasuries will have to rise to attract buyers and this, of course, will lead mortgage rates higher.
And just in case you don’t believe me, here is my forecast for the average rate in 2021 rates alongside some of my fellow economists and, as you can see, other than Freddie Mac, we are in a fairly tight range.
I would add that the NAR and Freddie forecasts are a month or so old, so I would not be surprised to see them revise their forecast upward at some point.
Housing permits and starts
Moving on to the new home market — both permits and starts pulled back in February, with starts down by 8.5 percent on the month and single-family permits down by 10 percent.
So, what was going on? Well, despite strength in buyer traffic and lack of existing inventory, builders are slowing some production of single-family homes as lumber and other material costs continue to rise.
And shortages of lumber and other building materials, including appliances, are also putting future construction at risk.
While single-family starts for the first two months of the year are 6.4 percent higher than the first two months of 2020, there has been a 36 percent year-over-year increase in single-family homes permitted but not yet started, as some projects have been put on pause because of the cost and availability of materials to build homes.
To give you some perspective about the direction of lumber prices, they have skyrocketed more than 180 percent since last spring, and this price spike has caused the price of an average new single-family home to increase by more than $24,000 since April of last year.
This chart provides an overview of the U.S. framing lumber pricing market, and it’s not pretty.
But you can also see that the futures price has been dropping, which may mean that we are getting closer to the end of the massive increases in lumber prices that builder have been facing. Time will tell.
On the sales side of the equation, after a slight rebound in December and January, the slowing of the pace of new home sales continued in February as a combination of affordability challenges, more costly materials and storm effects which, in concert with each other, led purchases of new homes to drop by 18 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 775,000 units.
But I would add that the February sales rate was 8 percent higher than we saw a year ago, and there is still demand which is being supported by still relatively low interest rates, but more from solid demand in lower-density markets like the suburbs and exurbs.
Inventory levels did rise slightly with 312,000 new homes for sale, but that was 4.6 percent lower than a year ago. The median sales price came in at $349,400, up 5.3 percent from a year ago.
And finally, I recently read a fascinating analysis that the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) put out, which in essence suggested that the recent rise in mortgage interest rates over the past two months has priced more than 1.3 million households out of the market for a median-priced new home.
In fact, the study found that just a $1,000 increase in the U.S. median new home price would push 153,967 households out of the market.
So, looking at it this way, the NAHB created the affordability pyramid you see here, which shows that as the price of a new home increases, the number of households in each tier that are able to afford it decreases. All very logical.
About 21.1 million households are estimated to have the income needed to buy homes priced below $100,000, and they are shown on the bottom step of the pyramid.
Of the remaining 101.8 million households that can afford a home priced at $100,000, 19 million can only afford to pay a top price of somewhere between $100,000 and $175,000, and they are shown on the next step. Naturally, this trend continues up the pyramid of house prices, with each step representing a maximum affordable price range and the number of households that qualify.
Although it’s certainly possible to find households at the high end of the market, there are a lot more households at the low end where affordability is a very major concern — 71.1 million households in America could not afford to buy a median-priced new home. That’s almost 58 percent of all households in the country.
The bottom line is that increased development costs can — and likely will — price these households out of the market for a new home, and with the cost of existing homes also rising rapidly, for more and more households, reaching the American dream of homeownership is getting harder and harder.
I’m sorry — I really didn’t mean to end on a low note — but the facts are the facts. We need more housing supply and we need home price growth to slow. Of course, price growth will slow if my mortgage rate forecasts are accurate, but it might already be too late for many who would like to buy a home.
To get the big picture including all of the data, watch the full video above.
Matthew Gardner is the chief economist for Windermere Real Estate, the second largest regional real estate company in the nation.