The Columbus Dispatch

The real estate roller coaster continues into ’21

- Real Estate Matters Ilyce Glink and Samuel Tamkin

It’s safe to say that 2020 will go down in history like a year no other. Even, or perhaps especially, in real estate.

COVID-19 lockdowns hit mid-march, and by the beginning of April, we heard whispers about a dramatic change in attitude from home buyers. Agents and brokers across the country reported that buyers were fleeing big city centers, looking to escape crowded living spaces, shared elevators, shuttered restaurant­s and the cultural institutio­ns they had enjoyed and supported for decades.

Where were they moving? Anywhere they could get more space: suburbs and even rural America (but only if there was great Wi-fi). The more green space the better. Those who could work from home, and were now helping their children go to school at home, wanted more space for themselves and their families.

City condos went on the market. Suburban houses started selling like hotcakes. Condos took longer to sell, and list prices started dropping (a little in some areas, more in others) while suburban home prices soared. (Rent prices in markets like San Francisco and New York dropped as well, with landlords offering dramatic monthly rent reductions with free months of rent, a trend that continues.)

But COVID-19 hasn’t caused a real estate housing crisis the way the Great Recession caused millions of suddenly unemployed homeowners to burn through their cash as they fought, and ultimately fell into, foreclosur­e.

The CARES Act was passed. A remarkable piece of legislatio­n, it required lenders to allow homeowners with federally backed mortgages (by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, FHA, VA and USDA) to opt into no-fault forbearanc­e. Just for asking, you could stop making your mortgage payment without leaving a seriously negative, long-lasting imprint on your credit history (or tanking your credit score).

Forbearanc­e would last as long as 12 months, and then you’d have three ways to come out of it: The missing payments would be tacked onto the end of your mortgage, you’d just pay the missing amount in a lump sum (or a catch-up plan would be enacted) or the loan would be modified to an amount you could afford to pay. It was eminently reasonable, and without precedence.

(At the same time, the CARES Act put almost all federal student loans into forbearanc­e, which took pressure off those facing monthly mortgage and student loan payments. As a result, a significant portion of those in mortgage forbearanc­e continued making their monthly payments anyway.)

According to Freddie Mac, at the height of the pandemic, roughly 8% of homeowners opted into mortgage forbearanc­e. Today, 5.46% of homeowners are still in its protective shell according to the Mortgage Bankers Associatio­n. Average credit scores reached a new high in 2020, and mortgage interest rates hit new loans more than a dozen times. (How low? The mortgage interest rate on an adjustable loan we have was just reduced to 2.785% for 2021.)

Some of these tenants owe billions of dollars in unpaid rent and have been protected thus far by eviction moratorium­s. What happens when those moratorium­s end?

Those Americans who held onto their jobs, or got them back fairly quickly, deleverage­d their debt. When solid credit scores and the lowest interest rates in history met the need to escape for literally greener pastures, demand for housing soared, and prices skyrockete­d.

(Let’s not forget that another complicati­ng issue in the Great Recession was that housing prices were in a bubble, so when the housing crisis hit, many homeowners were underwater with their mortgages. Rising prices over the past half a dozen years means many homeowners now enjoy a significant amount of equity. Lack of housing stock today means homeowners who are in serious trouble can simply sell their homes and walk away with cash in their pocket.)

Now, the housing crisis COVID-19 may cause is one for mom-and-pop landlords, who rent to those employed in the retail, hospitalit­y or entertainm­ent industries. Some of these tenants owe billions of dollars in unpaid rent and have been protected thus far by

eviction moratorium­s. What happens when those moratorium­s end?

There may well be a commercial real estate crisis brewing as well, as companies that now see their employees can work from home effectively have begun the process of deleveragi­ng or reducing office space. Every dollar not paid in rent drops to the bottom line. Walking around downtown Chicago, we’ve seen the empty office towers and wondered who will be required to go back to work in crowded towers. Stories of much emptier city centers are playing out around the globe.

Whatever happens with commercial real estate in the next few years, home buyers and sellers should be safe. According to Realtor.com’s December

Housing Report, we started 2021 with the lowest amount of existing housing inventory (homes available for sale) ever, coming in below 700,000 homes for sale, a drop of nearly 40% year over year.

So, here’s where we are: Home prices will keep going up in 2021. Mortgage interest rates are at rock bottom. Credit scores are the highest on record. Affordability will be a challenge, especially for first-time buyers. Home buyers beware: It’s going to be hard to find what you want at a price you can afford this year, especially if you’re looking for green space.

Contact Ilyce Glink and Samuel J. Tamkin through her website, Thinkglink.com.

 ?? DREAMSTIME/TNS ?? The pandemic has caused various issues in the real estate market.
DREAMSTIME/TNS The pandemic has caused various issues in the real estate market.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States