Market Update February 28, 2024

Market Update

After a dip in rates spurred a boost to housing in January, the recent increase back above 7% demonstrates that the rebound will be bumpy as pending sales cooled. Still, all signs indicate that buyers have begun to adjust to more normal rates than we enjoyed during the pandemic as several key indicators of market competitiveness describe a market that is heating up as the Spring homebuying season approaches. Still, other trends show that homebuyer demand remains more depressed than it should be and buyers would do well to consider the long-term benefits of homeownership (which are well documented) alongside their short-run concerns about the market.

Pending sales flat in February but holding on to recent gains: Pending home sales in January posted an even larger year-to-year gain than California enjoyed in closed sales last month. That suggests that the recent rebound in the market reported last week should continue through February and the first half of March. Much of the recent rise in closed sales has been driven by the top-end of the market, which is once again rising by double digits in the $1 million and up segments of the market. In addition, the rise has been fairly consistent in various parts of the state with more affordable and denser urban metros all showing similar improvements this year. Rates did reverse course this month, so the second half of March could see weaker activity, but thus far, interest rates have been trending mostly flat, albeit with significant volatility week to week.

Market competitiveness ramps up as inventory remains tight: The primary sign indicating that consumers have begun to adapt to the current rate environment is demonstrated by how competitive the market has gotten before the Spring homebuying season has even gotten underway. For example, days on market continues to drop as homes start to sell more quickly. Typically, the median time on market peaks in January each year and falls throughout the busy season. In 2023, the median time from the time a home hit the market and went pending peaked at 42 days. This year, it peaked at 36 days and has been falling for the past four weeks in a row to just 20 days last week. More homes selling above list price has been trending up and was almost half of all closed sales last week.

New home sales on the uptick: Active listings at the state level dipped again on a year-over year basis for ten straight months, but the decline for the current month was the smallest. More importantly, new active listings at the state level increased from a year ago for the first time in 19 months and the annual increase was the largest since May 2022. Potential home sellers could hit the pause button on listing their house in the next few weeks though, as rates climbed back up to a two-month high late last week due to the latest inflation concerns. In general, rates are expected to decline later this year, and available inventory should slowly improve throughout 2024.

Rates come down slightly last week: Although the U.S. saw a very strong jobs report for January that drove a surge in both 10-year bons as well as 30-year mortgage rates a few weeks ago, the Freddie Mac reading on average consumer rates ticked back down from 6.9% last week to 6.77% this week. However, there has been a growing divergence between the Freddie Mac number and daily rates being quoted in the marketplace, which remain above 7% as we began the final week of February. Given the latest economic data, rates are not expected to drop as quickly and many forecasters no longer expect the Fed to begin cutting rates until the second half of the year. As such, some prospective homebuyers may opt to return to the market now and refinance later compared to when rates were expected to fall faster.

Confusion and uncertainty restraining homebuyer demand: The rise in rates over the past two years that saw 30-year fixed-rate mortgages go from under 3% to over 8% at one point last year has undoubtedly had a negative effect on homebuyer purchasing power and homebuyer demand. However, demand is much softer than it should be. In the wake of the financial crisis back in 2010, the U.S. unemployment rate was nearly 10% compared with 3.6% last year. However, new mortgage purchase applications were 21% lower than in 2010. More people were applying to purchase homes when unemployment was almost triple where it is today. Buyer demand is much more depressed than can be explained by our relatively strong economy.

Most California homeowners are paying on time and have lots of equity: Although the California Association of Realtors (CAR) remains optimistic about the trajectory of the market and our forecast for an increase in sales this year, the fundamentals in the current batch of mortgages in California should provide some relief to those worried about a worst-case scenario materializing. First, California ended last year with just 2.5% of mortgages delinquent, meaning that almost 98% of homeowners are still making their payments on time. In addition, nearly 98% of California’s homeowners have at least 20% home equity and, based on our analysis, even the upper-end of estimates on a price correction would leave the vast majority of homeowners with at least some positive equity, which will preclude a major increase in distressed sales should the economy turn south.