The biggest part of the housing market may about to be flooded with buyers
Matthew Eisman/Getty
New homebuyers may be about to flood the US market for existing homes to lock in the lowest mortgage rates they can.
In the last two weeks — since the election of Donald Trump — mortgage rates jumped alongside other interest rates. This happened as investors raised their expectations for economic growth and inflation, placing their bets on Trump's plans to spend heavily on infrastructure and cut taxes.
The Bankrate.com 30-year national average rate was up from 3.5% on election day to 3.95% on Tuesday, the highest level since December 2015. This is still historically low.
"In the short-term, some prospective buyers may rush to lock in their rate and buy now, while others — especially those in higher-priced markets — may be forced to delay as a larger monthly payment outstretches their budget," said Lawrence Yun, the chief economist at the National Association of Realtors (NAR), in a data release on Tuesday.
The NAR released its monthly report on existing home sales, which showed that sales rose at the highest annualized pace in a decade during October. Sales increased by 2% at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.60 million, beating economists' consensus forecast.
And if mortgage rates continue rising, existing-home sales — which record the most housing transactions — could increase to new records. Additionally, a strong jobs market and higher wages could offset any drop in demand that higher mortgage rates cause, according to David Berson, the chief economist at Nationwide.
"October's strong sales gain was widespread throughout the country and can be attributed to the release of the unrealized pent-up demand that held back many would-be buyers over the summer because of tight supply," said Lawrence Yun, chief economist at the NAR.
The housing market has been faced with an inventory crunch that drove up prices, especially in coastal metros. The median existing home price rose 6% year-on-year in October to $232,200 — the 56th straight rise.
Ralph McLaughlin, the chief economist at Trulia, said Trump's focus should be on policies that encourage existing owners to sell and build, not just those that boost demand.
"Such policies could include a reduction in capital gains taxes for homes sold by investors to owner-occupiers, an increase in tax rates on rental income, or both," he said in a note.
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