The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Road to homeowners­hip gets rockier this spring as rates rise

- By Alex Veiga and Larry Fenn

LOS ANGELES — Higher mortgage rates are making the already challengin­g task of buying an affordable home even tougher for many Americans this spring.

In metro areas such as Denver, buyers are rushing to close a deal before mortgage rates get too high. In Dallas, some are embracing longer commutes to find homes they can afford. And in places such as Los Angeles, where the number of homes for sale is down sharply from a year ago, sellers routinely receive multiple offers.

While still low by historical standards, long-term mortgage rates have been mostly climbing this year. The average weekly rate on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage edged up to 4.42 percent last week. It was 3.95 percent at the start of this year.

A mere extra half percentage point or so can boost monthly payments and add tens of thousands of dollars extra in interest over the life of the typical 30-year loan. At a time when home prices are rising faster than incomes in many parts of the country, that could be enough to shut out some would-be buyers who make the median income in cities such as Seattle and Los Angeles.

First-time buyers already face significan­t hurdles to homeowners­hip because starter homes have seen the steepest price increases as well as sharpest decline in the number of homes on the market. Higher mortgage rates only further limit what buyers can afford.

The combinatio­n of low inventory, rising prices and higher mortgage rates is expected to weigh on the U.S. housing market this year, with several economists and housing experts forecastin­g U.S. home sales will be flat or only slightly higher than in 2017.

“We've been talking about low inventory for several years, and yet inventory continues to turn lower,” said Danielle Hale, chief economist for Realtor.com. “That puts us in a position where for home shoppers this spring it's going to be the most competitiv­e market we've seen in the last few years.”

Chad Zolman got a taste of that while looking for a home in Denver. The account manager made 11 offers since his search began in September, but lost out to rivals offering more money. As mortgage rates started rising, so did Zolman's anxiety about being able to afford to buy.

“The rates kept going up, and the more the rates kept going up, the less house you can buy,” said Zolman, 41. “And the less house you can buy in this market, that's not good. You have to be able to pony up the cash.”

Zolman eventually bought a newly built, three-bedroom townhome for $370,000. He got approved for a 30-year fixed-rate loan just under 4.7 percent. He's not in the clear yet, however. He can't lock in his rate until midMay, within the 120-day window before constructi­on on the house is completed.

And if rates go higher by then? “It is what it is,” Zolman said. “You just have to pay it.”

For others, rising mortgage rates — the 30-year rate hit a fouryear high of 4.46 percent in March — make it tougher to bridge the widening gap between home prices and incomes. Cities such as Denver, Los Angeles, Miami and Seattle have become less and less affordable, particular­ly for millennial­s and others looking to purchase their first home.

Consider that the national median home price is $225,264. That works out to 3.8 times the U.S. median income of $59,039, according to the most recent annual income figures from the U.S. Census and home price data from real estate informatio­n company Attom Data Solutions. The same price-to-income ratio was 3.3 back in 2000.

The affordabil­ity equation is less daunting for the buyer who earns the median wage in Pittsburgh, where a median-priced home at $125,000 is about 2.2 times the metro area's median income of $56,063. The same goes for buyers in St. Louis, Oklahoma City, Indianapol­is, Baltimore and other cities where the median home price is less than three times the median income.

By comparison, the home priceto-income gap becomes a yawning chasm in several California cities like Los Angeles, where a medianpric­ed home at $605,000 is more than nine times the metropolit­an area's median income of $65,950. Rising housing prices have widened the home price-income gap to five times or more in Seattle, Denver, Portland, Oregon, and Reno, Nevada, among other cities.

“When you look at the coastlines — Seattle, San Francisco, New York, places in the Northeast — you have a lot of those first-time home buyers who are now being priced out of the market,” said Nick Bailey, CEO of Century 21 Real Estate. “There's a point at which the average first-time home buyer just can't compete.”

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