Almost every indicator and statistic is saying that the U.S. housing market is slowing, sellers are fretting, buyers are canceling, lenders are firing, REALTORs are struggling, and title underwritersโ revenues are flatlining.
Why it matters: The Fedโs efforts to slow down rising inflation appear to be working. Raising interest rates raises mortgage payments to amounts that buyers canโt pay.
By the numbers: Consumer confidence in the housing market dropped to its lowest level since 2011. According to Fannie Maeโs Home Purchase Sentiment Index for July, only 17% of buyers believe it is a good time to buy a home, and only 67% of sellers feel it is a good time to sell. Estimates of a 10-15% price drop are bubbling up.
Builders are halting construction as interest rates rise and more buyers sit out the market. Theyโre also holding back because home inventory is soaring at a record rate as the supply of homes across the US grew at a record rate in July and the number of active listings jumped 31% from last year.
Investors are still buying homes but mostly in exurbs and rural areas.
-
Theyโre selling them to investors holding the properties as long-term rental investments.
-
They are not buying and rehabbing with the thought of selling to buyers who intend to occupy the home as their primary residence.
-
Rents are expected to continue to increase for the foreseeable future, making rentals an attractive buy-and-hold investment.
Silver linings: There are signs the market is normalizing; mortgage rates are dropping or holding steady each week, and Fannie Mae will now let lenders fund a borrowerโs down payment assistance.
The bottom line: Until buyers get used to seeing a โ5โ rather than a โ3โ as the first number in their interest rate, itโs going to be a slog.