Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Rates, home sales expected to hurt remodelers

- By Joyce M. Rosenberg

The Associated Press

NEW YORK — General contractor­s and other small businesses in the home remodeling industry can expect revenue to slow in 2019, the result of rising mortgage rates and sluggish home sales.

That’s the prediction of Harvard University’s Joint Center for Housing Studies, which last week issued its quarterly report on home remodeling. The center’s index of remodeling activity projects spending on renovation­s and repairs will gradually slow into the third quarter. Spending is expected to rise 7.7 percent in the current quarter compared with a year ago, and 6.6 percent in the July-September 2019 period.

A 6.6 percent gain is healthy, but it nonetheles­s is a sign that the remodeling boom of the past few years is waning.

Many homeowners renovate and make repairs before they sell and after they buy a house, but spending on remodeling has largely withstood a dip in home sales over the last year. Home sales have been hurt by an ongoing shortage of houses and apartments on the market. Existing home sales fell over 4 percent over the 12 months, the National Associatio­n of Realtors said Friday.

Rising interest rates are affecting home sales and remodeling. Home mortgage rates are at their highest levels in more than seven years, with the 30-year mortgage close to 5 percent. Typical monthly payments are up 15.4 percent higher from a year ago, according to real estate data company Zillow, which calculates that it now costs about $118 a month more to buy the same house today than it did at this time in 2017.

Many homeowners borrow to finance major home improvemen­ts, so rising rates may deter some of them from starting projects.

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