Home prices hit near record high as inventory bottoms out https://ift.tt/3dVwEPV

Home prices hit near record high as inventory bottoms out

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Redfin chief economist Daryl Fairweather says homebuyers are finding themselves “priced out of homeownership.”

Two days after revealing that 2021 broke records for days on market, median sales price, inventory and mortgage rates, real estate brokerage Redfin released a report that painted a dire picture for buyers.

The median home sale price nationwide is on track to hit a new record high before the year is over, rising 14 percent year over year to $359,750 in the four weeks ending Dec. 12. That’s just shy of its all-time high of $359,950 in July and 29 percent higher than the same period in 2019, according to Redfin.

Source: Redfin

Meanwhile, for-sale home inventory fell to an all-time low with active listings down 25 percent from 2020 and 43 percent from 2019.

Source: Redfin

Although Redfin’s Homebuyer Demand Index fell 3 percent in the week ending Dec. 12, the index was up 13 percent from a year earlier and, separately, seasonally-adjusted mortgage purchase applications rose 1 percent week over week. Available supply was no match for homebuyer demand; the average sale-to-list price ratio was 100.4 percent, according to Redfin.

Daryl Fairweather

“Homebuyers are being hit particularly hard by this wave of inflation,” said Redfin Chief Economist Daryl Fairweather in a statement.

“People who set out to buy a home in 2020 but delayed their plans or lost out in bidding wars may now find themselves priced out of homeownership. Right now the only thing likely to slow the rate of home-price growth is a mortgage-rate hike, which would be something of a Pyrrhic victory for homebuyers.”

Forecasters do expect mortgage rates to increase next year, but the effects would likely not be felt until the second half of the year. Before the Fed announced its new timetable for tapering on Wednesday, Fannie Mae economists were projecting mortgage rates would average 3.4 percent during the final three months of 2022, while economists at the Mortgage Bankers Association expected them to hit 4 percent.

Meanwhile, buyers are snapping up homes as fast as they can. In the last month, homes sold in a median of 26 days, down from 32 days the year before and 48 days in 2019, according to Redfin. Nearly a third of homes that went under contract, 31 percent, had an accepted offer within one week of being listing while 42 percent of such homes had an accepted offer within the first two weeks.

Pending home sales rose 4 percent year over year, but were up a whopping 50 percent compared to the same period in 2019, according to Redfin.

Source: Redfin

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