The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Mortgage rates swing back up, hitting 5.22%

- Compiled from Bloomberg and Nerdwallet reports.

U.S. mortgage rates rose back above 5%, ratcheting up pressure on the cooling housing market.

The average for a 30-year loan increased to 5.22% from 4.99% the previous week, Freddie Mac said Thursday in a statement. That’s the first increase since July 21.

This year’s rise in borrowing costs has started to calm the pandemic-era frenzy that gripped housing markets across the country. Potential buyers have been sidelined as they struggle to find affordable properties. These days homes are lingering on the market longer, fueling an increase in housing inventory in July, according to a Realtor.com report.

“The 30-year fixed-rate went back up to well over five percent this week, a reminder that recent volatility remains persistent,” said Sam Khater, Freddie Mac’s chief economist. “Although rates continue to fluctuate, recent data suggest that the housing market is stabilizin­g as it transition­s from the surge of activity during the pandemic to a more balanced market.”

With the market cooling, homebuilde­rs now are facing a rise in unsold properties. Confidence among those companies plunged in July as sales and buyer traffic slowed, according to a survey from the National Associatio­n of Home Builders and Wells Fargo & Co.

Freddie Mac’s mortgage data is collected from Monday through Wednesday. On Mortgage News Daily, which updates the figure more frequently, the rate on a 30year loan hit 5.18% late Wednesday.

“Real estate markets continue on the path toward rebalancin­g,” said George Ratiu, Realtor.com’s manager of economic research. “These shifts point toward a welcome change for buyers who are still in the market.”

Expect more rate hikes

Mortgage rates likely will rise again this month as the Federal Reserve continues to yank interest rates higher.

The Fed’s chairman, Jerome Powell, repeatedly has said that the central bank’s “overarchin­g focus” right now is to slow inflation. The Fed applies the brakes on inflation by raising short-term interest rates. When the central bank tugs shortterm rates higher, mortgage rates usually rise, too.

The Fed has targeted mortgage rates specifical­ly. During the depths of the pandemic, the central bank bought government and mortgage debt, pushing mortgage rates to record lows. Now the Fed is gradually reducing those debt holdings, which is expected to force rates upward.

This so-called reduction of the Fed’s balance sheet is just beginning. As Powell pointed out in a news conference July 27 after the Fed’s latest rate increase, the shedding of these assets is still ramping up and will “go to full strength” in September. As that date approaches, mortgage rates will bear additional upward pressure.

Affordabil­ity dips as rates rise

Those higher mortgage rates are claiming a bigger share of incomes and prices still rising at double-digit rates across most of the country.

The monthly bill on a typical existing single-family home with a 20% down payment jumped to $1,841 in the second quarter, according to the National Associatio­n of Realtors. That’s up 32%, or $444, from the first quarter and a 50% jump from a year earlier. Families spent about 24% of their incomes on mortgage payments in the second quarter, up from 19% in the previous three months and 17% last year.

The median price topped $400,000 for the first time, reaching $413,500. The 14.2% gain from a year earlier was slightly smaller than the 15.4% annual increase in the first quarter, thanks to a slowdown in sales. But that’s little comfort to would-be buyers who are stretching to afford a purchase and still getting tangled in bidding wars.

“Home prices have increased at a pace that far exceeds wage gains, especially for low- and middle-income workers,” said Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the Realtors group. “Overall, the national price decelerati­on inevitably followed the softening sales, providing well-positioned prospectiv­e buyers a small measure of welcomed relief.”

In the second quarter, 148 of the 185 metro areas measured by the Realtors group — or 80% — had double-digit annual price gains. That was up from 70% of regions in the first quarter. other local homeless placement programs, Vannatter’s agency offers landlords $2,500 for each recipient that moves into a unit, plus funding to repair a unit in advance of a HUD inspection, Vannatter said. In addition, the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority can provide a security deposit of as much as twice the monthly rent.

Daniel Yukelson, executive director of the Apartment Associatio­n of Greater Los Angeles, said many property owners “don’t want to touch” any voucher programs, particular­ly those run by the larger housing authoritie­s.

Landlords continue to hold suspicions about tenants who hold vouchers, driven by anecdotes from fellow property owners, he said. With plenty of potential tenants, they don’t want to wade through the paperwork of the voucher program. And they’re unwilling to wait, Yukelson said, for a housing authority to conduct an inspection — sometimes losing a month or two of rent — before a tenant moves in.

“There’s just not enough money put on the table for people to jump for it,” Yukelson said. “If I had a vacant unit and had 20 people show up — there’s a bunch of people begging to rent my apartment — why deal with all the administra­tive burdens?”

Vannatter said it’s difficult to tell just how effective the incentives will be, but he’s wary of overusing them.

“Landlords are smart, they’re trying to optimize dollars,” he said. “Would it help if we provide more money in these incentives? But it almost seems like we’re just throwing this money out there.”

 ?? ?? Housing choice vouchers have helped pay rent for more than 300,000 households in California this year, totaling $1.9billion in assistance.
Housing choice vouchers have helped pay rent for more than 300,000 households in California this year, totaling $1.9billion in assistance.

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