Redfin Reports Housing Markets in West Coast Hubs and Zoom Towns Cooling Fastest
Redfin reports a rapid cooling of housing markets in tech hubs like Austin, Seattle, and San Jose due to high mortgage rates, tech layoffs, and low inventory. Austin cooled the most, with a 40% drop in pending sales year-over-year. In February, homes in San Jose sold for only 0.6% above asking price, a significant drop from 12% the previous year. The Fed's interest rate hikes have pushed mortgage rates to around 6.4%, further dampening buyer interest. Key factors include rising home prices, which remain high even as demand wanes. The report highlights a mixed outlook amidst falling rates and increasing inventory.
- Some agents report renewed competition for fairly priced homes as mortgage rates decline.
- Pending sales show a slight uptick on well-priced listings.
- Pending home sales in Seattle and San Jose dropped 40% and 38% year-over-year, respectively.
- San Jose homes sold for only 0.6% above asking price in February, down from 12% last year.
- High mortgage rates at approximately 6.4% contribute to rising monthly payments.
- Tech layoffs and unstable stock market conditions deter potential buyers.
High rates, low supply, tech layoffs dampening demand in
Measures of homebuying demand and competition dropped off quickly in tech centers including
The typical
Redfin asked its agents to share how big a role the surge in tech layoffs, the shaky stock market and banking turmoil are playing in the cooldown, and found that coastal hubs are cooling quickly for a combination of reasons. Some reported that layoffs and precarious tech stocks are deterring buyers. Others attribute the slowdown mainly to other factors, including super-low inventory;
Housing markets in tech hubs are cooling quickly for several reasons:
-
Topsy-turvy tech stocks. Tech stocks fell more than
30% in 2022, though they have ticked up a bit since then. Shaky tech stocks hit theBay Area andSeattle hard because buyers employed in the tech industry often use stock proceeds for down payments. -
Tech layoffs. Layoffs in the tech industry, concentrated largely in the
Bay Area andSeattle area, are widespread.Shelley Rocha , a Redfin manager in theBay Area , said some buyers have bowed out of their search or canceled contracts because they've lost their job or are worried about losing it. Other agents say layoffs and dwindling tech job prospects are preventing some first-time buyers from entering the market at all. -
Low inventory. There are plenty of
Bay Area andSeattle residents who aren’t put off by the prospect of layoffs and a rocky stock market. But the limited number of homes coming on the market is tamping down demand from them, too. - Pandemic home-price increases are unsustainable. Home prices in tech hubs rose quickly for many years, especially during the pandemic, pricing out residents who didn’t work at Google, Meta, Amazon, Microsoft or another tech company. Now that tech is struggling and mortgage rates are high, an even bigger portion of local residents are unable to afford homes.
-
High mortgage rates. Mortgage rates are sitting around
6.4% , more than double the record low of ~3% that was common in late 2020 and early 2021. That has driven up monthly housing payments substantially in expensive markets. The typicalSeattle homebuyer pays per month with today’s$4,210 6.4% rate, versus around a year ago at a$3,200 3.5% rate. -
Still-high home prices. Home prices are falling in the
Bay Area andSeattle , but they’re still high, largely because of limited inventory. The typicalSan Jose andSeattle homes sell for and$1,250,000 , respectively, compared with the$710,000 national median. High mortgage rates are exacerbating the expense, pushing out many would-be buyers.$386,000
It’s worth noting that while these markets cooled quickly from
“I’m seeing bidding wars on homes that are priced fairly and accurately, and the overall market looks strong this week,” said San Jose Redfin agent Laxmi Penupothula. “Overpriced listings are the ones sitting on the market.”
The collapse of
The
Pandemic boomtowns go from hotspots to not-so-hot spots
But now, measures of homebuying competition and demand in
The surge of affluent homebuyers pushed up local home prices, and the subsequent rise in mortgage rates priced out even more local residents. Even though Austin’s median price per square foot fell
The story is similar in
Now housing markets in those boomtowns are doing an about-face as rates rise. Tech troubles are also contributing to dampened demand in these areas because many remote workers are struggling with layoffs and the prospect of them. The
The increasing portion of home sellers dropping their asking price illustrates just how much some of these markets have cooled. In
Parts of
Relatively affordable housing markets in
Next comes
Homes in all those places are relatively affordable; nine of the 10 have a median sale price below the national median (
To view the full report, including charts, please visit: https://www.redfin.com/news/housing-markets-cooling-fastest-february-2023
About Redfin
Redfin (www.redfin.com) is a technology-powered real estate company. We help people find a place to live with brokerage, rentals, lending, title insurance, and renovations services. We also run the country's #1 real estate brokerage site. Our home-buying customers see homes first with on-demand tours, and our lending and title services help them close quickly. Customers selling a home can have our renovations crew fix up their home to sell for top dollar. Our rentals business empowers millions nationwide to find apartments and houses for rent. Customers who buy and sell with Redfin pay a
For more information or to contact a local Redfin real estate agent, visit www.redfin.com. To learn about housing market trends and download data, visit the
View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20230327005190/en/
Contact Redfin
Redfin Journalist Services:
press@redfin.com
Source: Redfin
FAQ
How is the housing market in Austin, TX affecting RDFN?
What is the current state of housing prices in Seattle according to RDFN?
What role do mortgage rates play in the cooling housing market mentioned by RDFN?
What areas are cooling fastest in the housing market according to RDFN?