USA TODAY International Edition

Realtors see a flat road ahead for home sales

- Julie Schmit @JulieSchmi­t USA TODAY

SAN FRANCISCO Home sales will hold steady next year, but prices will continue to rise due to a low supply of homes for sale, the National Associatio­n of Realtors predicts.

Flattening sales will mark a sharp reversal from the past two years in which existing home sales increased from the year before. But the lack of income growth, higher home prices and rising interest rates will weigh on sales, says Lawrence Yun, the trade group’s chief economist, speaking at the NAR annual conference here Friday.

Median home prices, currently about $ 200,000 for the U. S., will rise 6% next year after an 11% gain this year, Yun says. The existing home inventory is now near a 13- year low.

“The inventory shortage will not go away,” Yun says, noting that new home constructi­on is still far from historic levels.

While rising home prices will en- tice more people to sell homes, many of those people will also buy homes, Yun says. New home constructi­on is what’s needed to expand inventorie­s.

Markets with stronger job growth will do better next year than those without. Some of the best- performing housing markets next year will likely include Salt Lake City, Houston, Denver, Seattle, Tampa and Atlanta, Yun says.

Coastal California markets are likely to continue to experience inventory shortages given good job growth in many of those markets and little new home building.

Home sales could get a boost next year if lenders loosen lending standards. That would expand the pool of potential buyers. Lenders may do that given a drop- off in refinance demand. Refinance volume will fall next year to a 15- year low, Yun says. That’s largely because interest rates have been below 6% for five years and there are not many people with mortgages left to refinance.

By the end of 2014, NAR forecasts the average 30- year fixed mortgage rate will hit 5.4%. Rates will rise as the Federal Reserve pulls back on the stimulus measures it has used since 2008 to keep rates low and stimulate the economy.

Zillow’s panel of 108 economists and real estate experts also predicts slowing home price appreciati­on ahead. They predict that home values will end 2013 up 6.7% over last year and rise 4.3% next year, eventually falling to 3.4% by 2018. At that pace, home values could exceed their May 2007 peak by the first quarter of 2018, Zillow’s data show.

As home prices rise, more home sellers typically appear. In this market, there’s been a “big disconnect” from that trend, says John Krainer, economic researcher at the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco.

 ?? STEVEN SENNE, AP ?? Flattening home sales will mark a sharp reversal from the past two years in which existing home sales increased from the year before.
STEVEN SENNE, AP Flattening home sales will mark a sharp reversal from the past two years in which existing home sales increased from the year before.

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