The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Homebuyers lured by dip in loan rates For many, the impact on their monthly house payment is the key.

- By Michael E. Kanell michael.kanell@ajc.com

It wasn’t the price, it was the rate.

Kevin Johnson and his wife closed in December on a newly constructe­d, five-bedroom, threebath home in Dallas for $449,000 — $100,000 more than the price they got for their Powder Springs home — a move they weren’t making because they really wanted to leave their home of eight years.

“Had we not found this one, we would have just stayed in our other house,” he said.

Mortgage rates had been climbing all year, shoved higher by the Federal Reserve’s steady hikes in short-term interest rates, a campaign aimed at cooling inflation that had also been chilling the housing market. But as mortgage rates soared, Johnson found a builder who offeredan “in-house” mortgage at 3.9%.

“That incentive made the difference,” he said. “If there’s one thing I can do, it’s arithmetic.”

Prices matter, but rates are crucial.

The median list price of a metro Atlanta home has risen 34% in five years, according to Realtor. com, a challenge to affordabil­ity. In early February, just 10% of listings were at $250,000 or below, according to broker Kristen Jones of Re/max Around Atlanta.

Prices have been rising faster than incomes, and not just in Atlanta.

“I think our biggest concern is continuing to find affordabil­ity for the majority of Americans,” said Ryan Marshall, chief executive of Atlanta-based PulteGroup, the nation’s third-largest homebuilde­r. “Most people who buy a house take a mortgage and the impact that the Fed has on affordabil­ity is front and center,” he told The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on.

The median sales price of a metro Atlanta home in January

was $360,000, according to the Georgia Multiple Listing Service.

The fiercest demand is for lower-priced homes, but the higher that prices go, the more interest rates are a factor, said Richard Key, a broker with Village Premier Collection. “We saw a lot of people step back and wait for the rates to come down. And then we saw an influx of buyers into the market in the new year.”

When rates dip, they can bring higher-priced homes within reach of cash-strapped buyers. Higher rates can put the same homes out of reach.

Even if it doesn’t chase a wannabe buyer out of the market, it changes calculatio­ns, said John Ryan, chief marketing officer for Georgia MLS. “For the average home buyer, the rise in rates could mean the difference between an extra bedroom, or a compromise on the location or desired features of a property.”

In mid-2021, the average 30-year mortgage rate was 2.77%. A borrower with a 20% down payment could buy a $400,000 home and have a monthly payment of $1,638, according to Bankrate. Then rates rose in early 2022 to 3.55%.

That increased the monthly tab by $136. Painful, but the interest rate hike had just begun to bite.

The Fed kept shoving and rates kept climbing and by mid-november, they averaged 7.37%, according to Mortgage News Daily. That meant that same buyer would face a monthly payment of $2,538, up more than $1,000 a month from the rock-bottom rates of 2021.

No wonder many buyers left the market. Sales in the 12 counties around Atlanta were down 38% in November from a year before, according to Georgia MLS.

While the Fed sets the ground floor for borrowing, it doesn’t dictate mortgage rates. Other factors — the broader economy, inflation, the market for other investment­s, the buyer’s credit worthiness — also figure in. And in the last few weeks of the year, mortgage rates fell so that same borrower would pay $2,274 — up $636 from two years ago, but a bargain compared to November.

Thomas Hulme and his wife have been staying with her family since moving back to Atlanta last year. They’ve been house-hunting for something between $450,000 and $650,000, he said. “And that’s really stretching. But you can only live with your in-laws for so long.”

He’s a broker for Re/max, so he knows the market, and he marvels at the way rates move buyers.

“When the rates are a halfpoint or a full point higher, it just makes it so much harder for people. It really changes the game.”

As interest rates dipped, the Hulmes found themselves in competitio­n for desirable homes, he said.

“We’ve made three offers on three houses and come up short.”

Competitio­n could get even more heated. Last week, the average dipped to 5.99%, according to Mortgage News Daily.

To be sure, even the fall’s higher rates were not historical­ly high: From 1971 until the summer of 2001, the average mortgage rates dipped below 7% only for a few weeks.

But last fall’s rates were just as surely a big change from the immediate past. The last time mortgage rates averaged more than 7% was in the late winter of 2002. An entire generation of homebuyers has borrowed money cheaper than a buyer entering the market in November.

That means almost no one has an incentive to refinance their mortgage. It also means most owners who sell will face an increase in their mortgage rate if they buy another home.

That keeps many potential sellers from ever putting their homes on the market, said Warren Wachsberge­r, chief executive of AECOM Capital, a real estate investor and developer, which recently started constructi­on of a 500-unit apartment complex next to Piedmont Park.

It’s hard to predict how long it will take the Fed to be satisfied that it has reduced inflation, which is partly about prices, but also about the Fed’s attitude, he said.

“The question is, how long will it take to unwind about $8 trillion of stimulus put into the economy?” Wachsberge­r said. “The one certainty is that we don’t know.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Interest rates can make a big difference in the affordabil­ity of a home. Here, a new Pultegroup home for sale in metro Atlanta.
CONTRIBUTE­D Interest rates can make a big difference in the affordabil­ity of a home. Here, a new Pultegroup home for sale in metro Atlanta.

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