Despite prospects of higher mortgage rates, housing market should continue to improve
Despite prospects of higher mortgage rates, housing market
should continue to improve
Home buyers waiting on a return to lower mortgage rates
before buying are probably out of luck, a top housing economist told local
home builders and Realtors Tuesday.
Lawrence Yun, the chief economist for the National
Association of Realtors, sad home borrowing rates are headed higher as the
Federal Reserve Bank tightens its monetary policy, inflation edges higher and
government deficits worsen.
"Some consumers may be thinking that because
mortgage rates are higher than they were a year ago, maybe I should just wait
until rates fall down again," Yun said during a luncheon speech to the
Greater Chattanooga Realtors and the Home Builders Association of Chattanooga.
"Well, they will be waiting forever."
The top economist for America's biggest real estate
association said he expects 30-year mortgage rates will likely rise to about 5
percent, up from the current rate of 4.75 percent, over the next 12 months.
That's still only a fraction of the 14 percent
mortgage rates of the 1970s when the Fed tightened to help control double-digit
inflation rates. But it could make housing affordability even more challenging
for many would-be buyers.
Already, rising home prices and mortgage rates have
cut into some home sales, keeping overall sales of single-family homes
relatively stable despite the overall improving economy. In June, for instance,
single-family home sales by Chattanooga Realtors were down 5 percent from a
year earlier, although sales are still up slightly for the entire first half of
the year.
Yun said most millennials and other young adults say
they still want to buy and own their own home, but college debt and higher
prices are making it more difficult for many to afford to buy a house.
"The drop in the home ownership rate (from the
peak a decade ago) is not their desire," Yun said. "It is the
circumstance of not having enough for a down payment, especially as home prices
go up."
Credit standards are higher than before the Great
Recession so qualifying for a mortgage is more difficult than a generation ago
for many young home buyers.
In response, the Tennessee Valley Federal Credit Union
(TVFCU) said it is offering a no downpayment mortgage for those with strong
credit ratings and good income "and we're really killing it with that
product," TVFCU President Todd Fortner said.
"This is our most popular mortgage product right
now," he said.
Home prices in Chattanooga during the second quarter
already rose twice the rate of inflation. In the spring quarter of the year,
the median price of the homes sold by Realtors in Chattanooga rose 5.8 percent
from a year go to a record high of $188,600. Despite those gains, Chattanooga
prices still average nearly 30 percent less than the U.S. average, however.
Yun forecasts that the pace of rising home prices will
likely slow in 2019 and 2020 but still increase by an average of 4 percent.
Despite higher prices and mortgage rates, Yun predicts
home sales should still rise 2 percent or more next year and in 2020 as the
economy continues to grow and more inventory of new homes are added.
Despite the gain in residential real estate sales, Yun
said commercial real estate sales could decline in the next year until market
prices adjust to rising interest rates.

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