FINANCEHOUSING
The economic shock hitting the housing market is
getting bigger—6% mortgage rates look close
BY
LANCE
LAMBERT
June 11,
2022 8:18 PM GMT+2
https://fortune.com/2022/06/11/housing-market-is-once-again-watching-mortgage-rates-spike/
Sign up for
the Fortune Features email list so you don’t miss our biggest features,
exclusive interviews, and investigations.
The good
news: The Federal Reserve has the instruments necessary to rein in runaway
inflation. The bad news: Those instruments are, well, blunt and will hit some
sectors harder than others. Among the most vulnerable: the U.S. housing market.
Just look
at history. The inflationary period that took off during the ’70s was quelled
by the Federal Reserve. But that was only after the central bank pushed
interest rates so high that mortgage rates topped out at over 18% by 1981. That
saw home construction cut in half by 1982.
Fast
forward to 2022, and the Fed has once again shifted into inflation fighting
mode. Right away, financial markets began pushing mortgage rates higher.
Indeed, between December and April, the average 30-year fixed mortgage rate
rose from 3.2% to 5.1%.
However,
over the past month that mortgage rate spike appeared to level off. It actually
fell for a three-week period in May. Well, that was until Friday, when it began
to accelerate again. The higher than expected Consumer Price Index reading,
which hit a 40-year high of 8.6%, put financial markets in a jitter. By the end
of the day on Friday, the average 30-year fixed mortgage rate was sitting at
3.85%.
"I don’t think we’ve seen the end of the
rise in Treasury yields," says Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's
Analytics. Historically speaking, mortgage rates follow the trajectory of the
10-year Treasury yield. If the 10-year does indeed go higher, Zandi tells
Fortune that we could see mortgage rates top 6%.
A 2.75
percentage point spike in mortgage rates over the past year—with most of it
coming over the past six months—is historically rare. You'd have to go back to
1981 to find the last time mortgage rates moved up that fast.
The swift
jump in mortgage rates was both an economic shock to the housing market and a
huge blow to home shoppers. If a borrower in June 2021 took out a $500,000
mortgage at a 3.1% fixed rate, they'd see a monthly principal and interest
payment of $2,135. At a 5.85% rate, that monthly payment would be $2,950.
That's a 38% higher monthly payment. Over the course of the 30-year loan, it's
an additional $293,264 in total payments.
That's also
a bad example. Why? Over the past year, home prices have spiked a record 20.6%.
Simply put: A borrower couldn't get the same home for $500,000 now as they
could a year ago. For that reason, let's say that $500,000 mortgage climbed
20.6% to $603,000. At a 5.85% fixed rate, the monthly principal and interest
payment on a $603,000 loan comes out to $3,557.
The swift
move up in mortgage rates coupled with the historic jump in U.S. home
prices—which have shot up 36.8% since the onset of the pandemic—is why the U.S.
housing market is slowing. Many borrowers, who must meet lenders' strict
debt-to-income ratios, have lost their mortgage eligibility or simply refuse to
shell out that much dough. Regardless, it has the U.S. housing market in what
Zandi calls a "housing correction."
Already,
we're seeing both existing home sales and new home sales fall—fast. On
Thursday, Freddie Mac deputy chief economist Len Kiefer tweeted that the
downward shift in mortgage applications means "the U.S. housing market is
at the beginning stages of the most significant contraction in activity since
2006."
We're also
seeing the cool down bring up inventory levels.
As the
housing boom took off during the pandemic, inventory plummeted to four-decade
lows. This March, nationwide inventory levels on Zillow were 64% below March
2019 levels. But as the housing market begins to shift into cool-down mode,
inventory is rising again. Between March 26 and May 7, nationwide inventory
levels rose 10%. That included an inventory increase of 54% in Coeur d’Alene,
Idaho, and 49.6% in Reno, Nevada.
"The
best part of the housing story in 2022 is the rise of inventory as this will
put home sellers and builders in check. They had too much pricing power and
they pushed prices way too high," says Logan Mohtashami, lead analyst at
HousingWire.
Even as the
housing market cools, Mohtashami says, there's still too little inventory on
the market. Indeed, the vast majority of regional housing markets (see chart
below) still have inventory levels that are more than 50% below their
pre-pandemic level. If mortgage rates start to fall again, he says, the tight
levels of inventory could see the frenzy come back.
Is it
possible the housing market could shake off this slow-down and kick back into
boom mode? Zandi doesn't think so. This housing cool down is by design—the
thinking of the Fed being if it can slow the housing boom, it can slow
inflation. On that front, Zandi says the Fed is likely happy with the housing
cooling that began in April.
Heading
forward, Zandi expects national year-over-year home price growth to flatline to
0%, and significantly "overvalued" housing markets to see 5% to 10%
home price dips. Of course, even a 5% to 10% price dip is hardly financial
relief for homebuyers—at least not if mortgage rates do indeed jump over 6%.
If you’re
hungry for more housing data, follow me on Twitter at @NewsLambert.

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário