Normalcy Slowly Returning to the Housing Market, According to First American Potential Home Sales Model
—The frenzy of the pandemic-era housing market appears to be the historical exception, not the rule. The housing market is adjusting to a not-so-new normal, says Chief Economist
- Potential existing-home sales decreased to a 5.74 million seasonally adjusted annualized rate (SAAR), a 3.0 percent month-over-month decrease.
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This represents a 64.6 percent increase from the market potential low point reached in
February 1993 . - The market potential for existing-home sales decreased 8.1 percent compared with a year ago, a loss of 503,350 (SAAR) sales.
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Currently, potential existing-home sales is 1,053,000 (SAAR), or 15.5 percent below the pre-recession peak of market potential, which occurred in
April 2006 .
Chief Economist Analysis: Market Potential for Existing-Home Sales Declines 3.0 percent Since March
“The market potential for existing-home sales in April declined 3 percent compared with last month, falling to 5.74 million at a seasonally adjusted annualized rate (SAAR). Housing market potential is down 8.1 percent, compared with the roaring housing market in
“Mortgage rates increased significantly in April,” said Fleming. “The jump in mortgage rates came as the
What’s the Fed Got to do with It?
“The Federal Reserve is actively trying to tame inflation and recently announced a 50-basis point increase in the federal funds rate.
The Dual Impact of Rising Mortgage Rates
“Rising mortgage rates impact housing market potential in two ways – reducing affordability and increasing the number of homeowners that are rate locked-in,” said Fleming. “While these forces may reduce existing-home sales, they will also bring much-needed balance to the housing market.”
Higher rates reduce affordability
“In
“Even though that is a significant decline in the potential number of home sales, it is relative to an unusually high level of potential sales in
Higher rates keep homeowners rate-locked in
“Existing homeowners are rate locked-in when their existing mortgage rates are below the prevailing market mortgage rate, creating a financial disincentive to sell their homes and buy new homes at a higher mortgage rate,” said Fleming. “The strength of this rate lock-in effect can be estimated using the difference between the average rate for all outstanding mortgages and the prevailing market mortgage rate. As the prevailing market mortgage rate rises further and further above the average rate for all outstanding mortgages, the greater number of existing homeowners are rate-locked in. In April, homeowners staying put resulted in a loss of nearly 81,000 potential home sales.”
A Return to Not-
“The frenzy of the pandemic-era housing market appears to be the historical exception, not the rule. Recency bias may have many believing that mortgage rates below 4 percent is normal, but it is anything but normal from a historical perspective,” said Fleming. “In fact, the historical average for the 30-year, fixed mortgage rate is nearly 8 percent.
“The rate lock-in effect will constrain supply below demand, making real house price declines unlikely. The good news for potential home buyers is that rising mortgage rates may help to cool the rapid pace of house price appreciation as some potential buyers will pull back from the market,” said Fleming. “As higher mortgage rates slow the housing market from its 150-mile-per-hour pace to something more in the line with its historical speed limit, sellers’ market conditions should ease, and home buyers will benefit from a not-so-new normal.”
Next Release
The next Potential Home Sales Model will be released on
About the Potential Home Sales Model
Potential home sales measures existing-homes sales, which include single-family homes, townhomes, condominiums and co-ops on a seasonally adjusted annualized rate based on the historical relationship between existing-home sales and
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