Qatar Tribune

US home prices to fall less than expected

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U.S. home prices will decline less than previously expected this year before stagnating in 2024, despite widespread expectatio­ns interest rates will remain higher for longer, according to property analysts polled by Reuters.

Even though the U.S. Federal Reserve has embarked on its most aggressive tightening cycle in four decades, average home prices have fallen just over 5% from their recent peaks, barely a dent compared to the 45% rise during the COVID-19 pandemic.

That resilience in one of the most interest-rate-sensitive sectors of the economy is largely down to the stubbornly tight supply of homes, which was not expected to ease for at least the next six months.

Home prices, which resumed their rise in March after eight months of declines, will fall 2.8% this calendar year on average, a May 15-30 polls of 30 property analysts showed. That is less than the 4.5% drop predicted in March.

Average house prices as measured by the S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller composite index of 20 metropolit­an areas were forecast to stagnate next year.

The predicted 9% peakto-trough fall is less than onethird of the slump during the 2007-2008 global financial crisis, leaving prices well out of reach for aspiring homeowners.

“Looking ahead, we think there is scope for prices to fall a little further. Affordabil­ity is still stretched and a weakening economy will weigh on homebuyer sentiment,” said Sam

Hall, property economist at consultanc­y Capital Economics.

“Given supply is likely to stay tight, there is a risk house prices may not fall as much as we previously expected.” Elevated house prices along with high consumer inflation suggest the Fed, which has raised its key rate from near-zero in early 2022 to 5.00-5.25%, will at least hold until end-2023, keeping upward pressure on mortgage rates.

The 30-year fixed mortgage rate, currently around 6.7%, was expected to average 6.2% in 2023. It is forecast to slip to 5.5% in 2024 on expectatio­ns the Fed will be cutting rates then.

Those high mortgage rates are restrictin­g housing supply, which upward pressures prices, as well as demand.

“Despite mortgage rates more than doubling since 2021, property owners haven’t been forced to sell because most have a job, and many are reluctant to list because they have a sweet deal on a longterm mortgage,” said Sal Guatieri, senior economist at BMO Capital Markets.

Existing home sales are currently running at an annualized rate of 4.28 million units – significan­tly lower than a peak of 6.56 million in January 2021 – and are forecast to remain around that rate.

Just over 70% of respondent­s, 16 of 22, said a significan­t downturn was more likely than a rebound for home prices during the remainder of the year.

“If the Fed is forced to tighten policy further to contain inflation, the market could resume a downward slide,” added BMO’s Guatieri.

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