Boston Herald

Keep an eye on housing market cooling trend

- By KENNETH R. HARNEY

WASHINGTON — Don’t call it a “buyer’s market.” Don’t call it a “correction.” But the fact is that a sobering change is taking shape in the housing market — an unmistakab­le cooling trend that defies an economy that is showing impressive growth, has the lowest unemployme­nt rate in years and the highest home-equity levels on record. Anyone thinking of selling or buying a home shouldn’t ignore it. Doing so could cost you money, time and maybe a great opportunit­y. Call it a re-balancing. For years since the end of the financial crisis, prices in most markets have increased steadily — by single digits annually in most places, double digits in cities like Seattle, San Francisco, Denver and others that have vibrant employment growth plus persistent and deep shortages of homes for sale. Sellers were in the saddle. That was then. This is now: Sales of existing and new homes have been sagging for half a year. According to data from the National Associatio­n of Realtors, resales have been dropping since the spring compared with year-earlier levels. At the end of the third quarter, resales were 2.4 percent below their level at the end of the same quarter in 2017. That’s despite growing inventorie­s of homes available for sale in some areas, reversing the boom-time pattern of bidding wars that pushed prices to record levels and drove buyers batty. Mortgage rates hit their highest level in nearly eight years in early November — 5.15 percent for a convention­al 30-year fixed-rate loan — according to the Mortgage Bankers Associatio­n. Lending Tree, an online network that pairs mortgage applicants with lenders, reported last week that the average annual percentage rate quoted to shoppers was 5.27 percent. Buyers with good scores between 680 and 719 were quoted 5.42 percent. Though rates in the 5s may sound reasonable to people who purchased or refinanced a home a decade ago, they are disturbing­ly high to millennial­s and other young buyers and magnify the affordabil­ity challenges they already face. Higher rates are also daunting to the millions of owners who have mortgages with rates in the mid-3-percent to 4-percent range. Rather than pursuing a move-up or downsizing purchase — requiring a new mortgage at today’s rates — many of them prefer to hunker down on the sidelines, further reducing sales activity. Sellers are cutting their list prices. According to research by realty brokerage Redfin, 28.7 percent of prices of homes listed for sale in major markets during the month ending Oct. 14 saw reductions. One of the key reasons for the cuts: Demand by shoppers is down by more than 10 percent compared with a year earlier. Consumer psychology is shifting as well: A national survey by Fannie Mae released last week found that the net share of Americans who believe it’s a good time to buy has fallen to just 21 percent, while the net share who say it’s a good time to sell is 35 percent. The cycle has moved from seller-advantage to at least mildly purchaser-advantage in many parts of the U.S. So what does this mean to you as a potential seller or buyer? Top of the list: Speak to multiple realty profession­als to get a good handle on where your local market is relative to the national cool-down. If you’re a seller, the key to your transactio­n will be getting your list pricing right. If you’re a buyer, take your time but keep in mind: If you shop diligently, this fall could be a smart time to catch a deal — a marked-down price on the house you really want.

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