Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Singer: Buyers can be protected

- Jill Schlesinge­r Jill Schlesinge­r, CFP, is a CBS News business analyst. A former options trader and CIO of an investment advisory firm, she welcomes comments and questions at askjill@jillon money.com. Check her website atwww.jillonmone­y.com.

A surprising star has emerged from the pandemic-induced recession: the housing market. After freezing up inMarch and April, realtors, buyers and sellers began adapting to a new reality— we are spending a lot more time in our dwellings, and some of us are not happywith wherewe currently live.

Add to that fact that there are not enough houses for sale— and that mortgage interest rates have cratered— and youmay notice there is a full-fledged frenzy going on in some housingmar­kets around the country.

While that’s great news for sellers, buyers are encounteri­ng hurdles in the race to fulfill their home sweet home dreams. The most pressing issue is there isn’t a large enough supply of homes to meet demand.

At the end of August, there were just 1.49million singlefami­ly existing homes for sale, the lowest count for August in decades.

Limited inventory has caused prices to rise (the median price for all existing homes in August was $310,600, up 11.4% from a year ago), and spurred a resurgence in mid-2000s-like bidding wars. Real estate firm Redfin has seen four consecutiv­e months wheremore than half (54.5%) of home offers faced a biddingwar.

If you have run your numbers and knowwhat you can afford, a biddingwar isn’t theworst thing in theworld. That said, emotions and desires can lead you to overpay, not to mention stretch your finances inways that could haunt you in the future.

Economist Teresa Ghiralducc­i notes that prices in manymarket­s are overvalued, based on the rule of thumb that “suggests if a home costs more than 20 times the annual rent the home could fetch, the house is probably overvalued — a $400,000 home should rent for $1,667 per month or more.”

To address the lack of housing inventory, builders have been playing catch up. Single-family housing starts in August hit one million for the second time this year, and for only the third time since July 2007. Those numbers explain why your friends in the home-building business are feeling upbeat: Builder sentiment hit an all-time high in September, since the series began 35 years ago.

Meanwhile, plunging interest rates have extended to housing loans. In mid-September, the 30-year fixed-ratemortga­ge averaged 2.87%, according to FreddieMac, while the 15-year fixed-rate mortgage hovered to an average of 2.35%. Lowrates have induced many morewouldb­e buyers to start their househunti­ng adventures.

But be aware that lenders learned a lesson from the boom and boost in the 2000s: It’s not wise to lend to just anywould-be buyer with a heartbeat. Lending standards have gotten much tougher in the current housing mini-boom.

TheMortgag­e Bankers Associatio­n found that mortgage credit availabili­ty has dropped to the lowest level sinceMarch 2014. That means that unless you have solid credit, the mortgage rates that scream across your screens may not be available to you.

Research from the Federal Reserve Bank ofNew York found that the median credit score on mortgages originated in the second quarter surged to a 21-year high of 784, up 11 points from the previous quarter and 25 points from a year ago, “as lenders tightened standards in response to uncertaint­y over the labor market.”

Thatwas the highest median score since they have been keeping records over the past two decades.

Bottom line: If you are in the market to buy a house, run the numbers, do your research and be patient— the process could take some time.

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