Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Can home values survive the virus? With homebuying on the skids, price stability in question

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Bankrate.com

The longest U.S. economic expansion in history is writing its final chapter as COVID-19 casts a long shadow on the economy, including what was a vigorous housing market just a few months ago, before the outbreak.

Last year’s active spring homebuying season was driven by robust housebuyin­g power, a stark contrast from this season’s tepid activity. The housing market has been hobbled.

Home sales are expected to fall by roughly 15% in 2020, according to a report by Fannie Mae. The report forecasts that existing home sales will plunge by nearly 1 million units, dropping to an annual rate of 4.54 million, down from 5.34 million in 2019.

As existing homes ghost the market, new constructi­on is also stalling. Constructi­on starts plunged 22% in February, according to a report by the U.S. Census Bureau and the Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t.

“Right now we have a housing shortage. There are fewer listings and fewer buyers,” says Lawrence Yun, chief economist of the National Associatio­n of Realtors. “Because of the pandemic, constructi­on has been halted in some states. Our target is five to six months of housing supply; today it’s under four months.”

The current environmen­t has sent buyers into hibernatio­n, as reflected by dwindling home loan activity. Mortgage purchase applicatio­ns fell 31% compared with the same time last year, according to data from the Mortgage Bankers Associatio­n’s Weekly Mortgage Applicatio­ns Survey for the week ending April 17.

“The pandemic-related economic stoppage has caused some buyers and sellers to delay their decisions until there are signs of a turnaround,” said Joel Kan, an MBA economist. “This has resulted in reduced buyer traffic, less inventory and March existing-homes sales falling to their slowest annual pace in nearly a year.”

Before COVID-19 shocked the economy, home values were on a fourmonth accelerate­d track. February home prices surged by 4.1% year over year, while January brought the eighth consecutiv­e year of annual home price gains in the U.S., according to CoreLogic’s monthly Home Price Index report.

“The nearly 10-year-old recovery of the U.S. housing market has run headlong into the panic and uncertaint­y from the global COVID-19 pandemic,” said Frank Martell, CEO of CoreLogic, in a statement. “In terms of home value trends, we are in uncharted territory as we battle the outbreak with measures that are generating a neverbefor­e-seen, rapid downshift in economic activity and employment. We expect that many homeowners will initially be somewhat cushioned by government programs, ultralow interest rates or have adequate reserves to weather the storm. Over the second half of the year, we predict unemployme­nt and other factors will become more pronounced, which will apply additional pressure on housing activity in the medium term.”

A major influence on home prices is inventory.

The lower the supply, the higher the prices as homebuyers exceed the number of homes for sale. Right now, inventory is tight, which might help keep home values up. However, if demand drops off due to economic uncertaint­y, values could drop, says Ken Johnson, an economist at Florida Atlantic University’s College of Business.

“You don’t have a supply and demand intersecti­on right now. A shortage of housing is not going to help keep prices up,” Johnson says. “The reason is uncertaint­y. Uncertaint­y is a sound economic principle. Uncertaint­y kills deals. People are fleeing the market.”

The murky economic outlook isn’t the only thing fueling uncertaint­y, Johnson says, but the fear that the housing market is long overdue for a price correction. If people fear that they’re buying at the top of a bubble, especially one accelerate­d by a global pandemic, then they’ll put off purchasing until prices begin to drop.

In a recent Gallup poll, only 50% of Americans believe it’s a good time to buy a house, which is the lowest percentage in Gallup’s polling history.

Americans are also pessimisti­c about home prices in their area, with just 40% stating that prices will rise; this is a 22 percentage-point drop from a year ago when 62% believed prices would go up. Meanwhile, 25% of Americans polled said that prices will drop in their area, up more than double from last year’s 9%; 33% believe prices will stay flat.

In the 100 largest metropolit­an areas in the U.S. based on housing stock, 33% have an overvalued housing market, 38% are at value and 29% are undervalue­d, according to CoreLogic.

Most home value forecasts rest on one thing: how long this pandemic lasts. The timeline is crucial, as the longer it drags on the deeper the cut to the economy and the harder it is to recover.

“The federal government is permitting mortgage forbearanc­e, which is providing time and preventing foreclosur­es; this is preventing the industry from crashing,” Yun says.

If the pandemic doesn’t drag on, Yun predicts that 70% of jobs will come back quickly and that the credit shortage will steadily ease. He also cites new policies, such as appraisal waivers and notary e-signatures, from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac as well as the FDIC and FHFA that will help facilitate home sales as people navigate closures and restrictio­ns.

Johnson agrees that a quick recovery can save sinking home values, though not completely.

“Let’s suppose we solve the health issue relatively soon, the market will open up pretty quickly. We might see a little bit of a downturn but not a crash,” Johnson says. “Right now housing is about 5% to 10% overpriced; we’re due for a housing slowdown anyway.”

There’s no guarantee that home prices will rise or fall, so homebuyers should be sure that their purchase makes sense. Since inventory is tight, many buyers might have to compete with multiple bidders for the same house, which can drive up prices.

For buyers who don’t plan on staying in the same home for at least five years, the risk is higher because their home might not rise in value enough to make up for expensive buying and selling costs.

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