Home prices have continued to rise despite rising mortgage rates and housing supply. The figures reflect a robust, expensive housing market. In this blog, we provide housing market predictions for 2022 and 2023. Additionally, we’ll provide an answer to a perennial favorite of prospective homebuyers and investors: Will the housing market crash in 2022?
This year’s dramatic and rapid jump in mortgage rates made an already expensive housing market much less affordable. Home prices surged dramatically during the first years of the Covid epidemic because demand was extremely high, supply was historically low, and mortgage rates reached a slew of new lows.
The current housing market trends show that it is expected to continue its upward trend in the next couple of years. Buyers remain interested, keeping the market competitive, especially for attractive, well-priced homes. But some factors could affect the pace of the market or whether it favors buyers or sellers. Despite the clear signs of a slowing housing market, it remains competitive for homebuyers, with new records set for home-selling speeds and price increases.
Higher mortgage costs and fears of a recession have cooled housing markets from their early spring highs. Most of the weakening demand appears in expensive West Coast markets that have seen price growth in the last two years. More affordable, warmer regions remain on buyers’ radars. Buyers still face plenty of competition, especially for attractive properties, with multiple offers and final sales prices higher than asking prices.
The market is moving away from sellers, but the balance is far off. Pressure on home price growth will persist through the end of the year and housing prices will continue to rise due to a mismatch between supply and demand. Many experts predicted that the pandemic would cause a housing crash on par with the Great Depression. That, however, is not going to happen. The housing prices are unlikely to drop even in the second half of 2022 but they are forecasted to rise more slowly than last year.
The housing market of 2022 is in far better shape today than it was a decade ago. The housing industry has had a boom last year, with the most significant annual gain in single-family house values and rentals, historically low foreclosure rates, and the highest number of home sales in 15 years, reaching 6.9 million for the entire year. The national home prices have increased 33 percent over the previous two years.
The market was driven by record-low borrowing rates in 2020 and 2021 and a constrained supply due to underbuilding. The tremendous demand from first-time homeowners is almost as crucial as the restricted new supply. The exceptionally favorable age demographic trends are also the driving force behind the current housing market.
Housing Market Predictions For 2022
According to Black Knight, a mortgage software, data, and analytics firm, home prices fell 0.77% from June to July, the first monthly drop in nearly three years. While the decrease may appear minor, it is the largest single-month drop in costs since January 2011. It is also the second-worst July result since 1991, trailing only the 0.9% drop in July 2010, during the Great Recession.
Home prices were still 14.3% higher in July compared to July 2021, which is more than three times the typical annual price growth rate, but the majority of that rise occurred during the first five months of 2022, before the huge spike in mortgage interest rates. Even if employment remains high, housing sales volumes are anticipated to dip in the second half of 2022 and throughout 2023.
Historical data suggests that sales could fall by 15% or more. The high level of employment and the rising ratio of cash buyers (30%) or those using ARMs will help to minimize what might otherwise be a temporary halt in the real estate market.
Low inventories will prevent home prices from flattening or declining. Strong job growth, low inventories, and tight supply will cause unequal price movements. Lower price tiers are more susceptible to interest rate hikes, while higher price tiers are more resistant to price decreases. The mix of homes that sell may be smaller on average as the market reacts to increasing mortgage rates and decreased affordability.
According to Freddie Mac, there are currently 18 percent more persons aged 25 to 34 than there were in 2006. This represents an increase of 6.6 million prospective first-time homeowners, from 39.5 million in 2006 to 46.1 million today. In addition to the increase in first-time homebuyers, the number of high-income renters who can afford to buy and are of prime first-time homebuyer age has also been growing.
In 2006, lending criteria were significantly loosened, and little examination was done to determine whether or not a borrower could repay their loan. These days, the requirements are more stringent, which lowers the risk for both the lenders and the borrowers. Consistent with a more challenging housing market for buyers, the share of buyers that faced at least one mortgage denial before getting approved grew from 22% in 2020 to 34% in 2021.
The government and jumbo segments had the most significant tightening in the previous month. These two housing markets couldn’t be more different from one another, and the current situation is in no way comparable to that of the past. The Mortgage Credit Availability Index (MCAI) is an index that is released regularly throughout the year by the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA). This index is used to measure how simple it is to get a mortgage.
The higher the index is, the more options there are for obtaining mortgage finance. In 2004, the index was hovering around the 400 mark. As the housing market heated up, mortgage loans became more available, and then in 2006, the index surpassed 850. The mortgage credit availability index (MCAI) fell as a result of the fall in the real estate market since it became nearly hard to get mortgage financing.
Since then, thankfully, the conditions for lending have been relaxed a little bit, although the index is still rather low. The index had a reading of 120.0 in May, which is around one-seventh of what it had been in 2006. It remains more than 30 percent below pre-pandemic levels. Because there aren’t as many options on the housing market, a lot of people in the United States are having a hard time finding the house of their dreams.
Communities all around the country are struggling because of low inventories. Over the past decade, chronic underbuilding and the influx of millions of millennials into the homebuying market have resulted in a major mismatch in housing supply and demand. Even though mortgage rates are skyrocketing, the housing market is not going to crash any time soon.
The result will be a much slower rate of appreciation than in the past two years. We are predicting the housing market for the next 5 years and to recognize patterns that may influence real estate values and rentals beyond a year.
CoreLogic HPI is designed to provide an early indication of home price trends. Home price growth slowed for the second consecutive month, indicating a broader housing market slowdown. Home prices increased by 18.3% from June 2021 to June 2022, marking the 125th consecutive month of year-over-year growth. Though annual growth remained strong, it slowed from the previous month for the second consecutive month, reflecting lower buyer demand caused in part by higher mortgage rates and concerns about a slowing economy.
On a month-over-month basis, home prices increased by 0.6% in June 2022 compared with May 2022. The CoreLogic HPI Forecast indicates that home prices will increase on a month-over-month basis by 0.6% from June 2022 to July 2022 and on a year-over-year basis by 4.3% from June 2022 to June 2023.
Nationally, home prices increased 18.3% year over year in June 2022. No states posted an annual decline in home prices. The states with the highest increases year over year were Florida (31.8%), Tennessee (25.8%), and Arizona (24.9%). Large cities continued to experience price increases in June, with Phoenix on top at 26.1% followed by Las Vegas at 24.3% year over year.
The US CoreLogic S&P Case-Shiller Index posted a 19.7% increase, down from a 20.6% gain in April, confirming a tipping point after strong reacceleration in home price growth in the early months of 2022. A further indication of slowing price growth is seen in the deceleration of the non-seasonally adjusted month-to-month index, which slowed to 1.5% in May from a 2.6% increase in March and a 2.3% gain in April.
May’s increase was the second strongest in the data series following a 2.3% gain last May. Between 2015 and 2020, the monthly index changes from April to May averaged about 0.9%. Higher mortgage rates and recession fears are hurting buyer demand, but overall sales activity through May was steady compared to 2021.
June appeared to be a turning point, with a significant drop in buyer interest. Next month’s data will reflect this. Highly unaffordable markets and those that led with price acceleration over the last two years, such as California’s coastal markets and Phoenix, are hallmarks of a slowdown, according to the CoreLogic S&P Case-Shiller Index.
Even though the housing market is cooling, it’s not balanced. After two record years, the housing market remains difficult for buyers, who face competition and pay premiums for attractive properties. The 10- and 20-city composite indexes also showed signs of losing speed, up by 19% and 20.5% year over year, respectively, compared with 19.6% and 21.2% in April. The overall tendency for more price increases in smaller markets continues to drive the 20-city index growth higher, as buyers flock to smaller and more affordable areas, particularly those in the Southeast and Florida.
Freddie Mac’s own regression research indicates that a 1 percent rise in mortgage rates reduces home price increases by around four percentage points (for example, moving from 11 percent home price growth a year to 7 percent ). In contrast, analysts at J.P. Morgan expect a greater impact of around six percentage points lower home price increase.
Since home values are so high, the housing market may be more susceptible to rate increases than in the past; therefore, the greater estimate appears realistic. While it seems apparent that rising interest rates will reduce housing demand by reducing affordability, the actual past is a significantly less reliable indicator of what will occur because of a huge balancing impact – interest rates often rise when the economy is expanding.
The government-sponsored enterprise forecasts that for every one percentage point increase in mortgage rates, house sales would decrease by around five percent, and price growth will slow by four to six percentage points. If mortgage rates stabilize at current levels, and all other factors remain constant, their analysis predicts a much slower, but still positive house price rise with a wide regional range depending on migration trends.
As work-from-home becomes increasingly popular, it is anticipated that the housing market will continue to be undersupplied and that migration to lower-cost areas will continue to rise. This is significant since most booming cities have a major housing shortage due to a previous inflow of population.
Finally, favorable demographics suggest that the robust demand for first-time homebuyers will persist. This is due to the fact that there are still a substantial number of younger renters with sufficient income to sustain homeownership, and they should continue to be a formidable force for the foreseeable future. As the economy faces various headwinds in the next months and years, these variables should continue to exert a substantial influence on the housing market.
The quarterly housing outlook pulse poll conducted by Freddie Mac assesses public attitudes on housing-related problems. Since the beginning of the epidemic, market confidence has reached its lowest point in the second quarter of 2022. In addition, as a result of the impact of growing inflation on the cost of living, they found an increase in housing payment difficulties, particularly among renters.
51% are confident the housing market will remain strong over the next year.
This is down 7 percentage points from last quarter.
56% of renters and 24% of homeowners spend more than 30% of their monthly income on housing.
51% are concerned about making housing payments, up 4 percentage points from last quarter.
This is true for 68% of renters (a 10-percentage point increase from last quarter) and 38% of homeowners (a 3-percentage point decrease from last quarter).
24% are likely to buy a house in six months.
17% of homeowners are likely to sell in the next six months.
23% of homeowners are likely to refinance in the next six months.
Source: Freddie Mac
Housing Market Forecast for the Second Half of 2022
The new housing market forecast for 2022 by Realtor.com® has been released as a mid-year update. After more than a year of skyrocketing demand, and skyrocketing home prices, the housing market appears to be cooling off. The housing market is not collapsing, but it is heading towards more balanced conditions from an unsustainable peak of last year.
This year, mortgage rates have risen by more than two and a half percentage points. Furthermore, the increasing expenses of purchasing a home have altered many prospective purchasers’ calculations. As a result, year-over-year house sales have fallen in recent months. A record 79 percent of respondents in a Fannie Mae study on homebuyer sentiment indicated it’s a poor time to buy a home.
Home sales activity kicked out 2022 stronger than anticipated, but rising costs have led to alter their forecast downward. Realtor.com now forecasts a 6.7% decline in house sales in 2022. They anticipate the greatest year-over-year decline in house sales at the customary peak of the summer selling season. Home sales on par with these predictions would mean that 2022 sales are the 2nd highest tally since 2007, trailing only 2021.
In the second half of 2022, house price growth will moderate, although it has been hotter for longer than anticipated, resulting in an upwardly revised forecast of a 6.6% home price rise for 2022. That’s an increase from their previous forecast of 2.2% growth in home prices. More than a decade of chronic underbuilding, coupled with millions of millennials entering the homebuying stage of life, has resulted in a major mismatch in housing supply and demand in the United States.
The median sales price appreciation prediction for existing homes has increased from 2.9% to 6.6% for 2022.
The prediction for existing home sales has shifted from positive growth of 6.6% to an annual fall of 6.7%.
Mortgage rates have been revised upward to reflect the major shift in monetary policy and financial conditions over the last 6 months.
In the second half of 2022, housing finance rates are predicted to climb at a more modest pace, which means that rates may hit 5.5% by year-end.
As mortgage rates have increased, prospective homeowners have submitted fewer loan applications.
According to the Mortgage Bankers Association, mortgage purchase applications decreased by 16 percent (in the week ending June 10) compared to the same week last year.
With mortgage rates, well above 5 percent, refinancing activity, which was brisk during the epidemic when rates were at an all-time low, has dwindled by more than 70 percent compared to last year.
Therefore, don’t forecast a halt in the home price rise even though mortgage rates are rising significantly. While housing costs remain high, forcing homebuyers to make difficult decisions, it is predicted that the number of properties for sale will continue to increase, building on the reversal that began in May 2022. That is a sign of relief for first-time home buyers.
Increasing housing inventory is excellent news for buyers. Homebuyers will have additional options as a greater number of homeowners want to adapt their living situations to changing personal demands and take advantage of favorable market circumstances to access the substantial wealth they have accrued.
Homeowners continue to be in a favorable position, particularly those who have owned for extended periods of time and amassed substantial wealth. This is forecasted to attract additional sellers looking to capitalize on favorable market circumstances, resulting in increased competition and a rebalancing of the housing market away from its previous seller-friendly bias. This bodes well for seller-buyers who have been disappointed by the scarcity of purchasing possibilities.
The median national home price for active listings declined slightly to $449,000 in July 2022, down from an all-time high of $450,000 in June and mirroring the seasonal trends seen in 2018 and 2019 when the price peaked in June and eased in July. This represents an annual growth rate of 16.6%, a slight deceleration from last month’s growth rate of 16.9%.
In addition, the median list price of listings in pending status–those homes for which the seller has already accepted a buyer’s offer to purchase–decelerated, from a year-over-year rate of 13.9% in June to a growth rate of 12.4% in July. This is the third consecutive month of pending listing price deceleration and indicates that the homes which buyers are choosing to buy are becoming increasingly less expensive than the typical listed home.
Housing Market Crash Predictions For Next Years
The overarching concern is whether or not the housing market will crash, and if so, when. The simple answer is that it will not crash anytime soon and we certainly don’t see a housing market crash coming in 2022. Rising rates are cooling the market as some expected but the prices are still rising at a slower rate. The current trends and the forecast for the next 12 to 24 months clearly show that most likely the housing market is expected to see a positive home price appreciation.
In recent years, the price of homes has climbed dramatically. Many prospective buyers, especially those with limited financial resources, are eager to hear whether and when home prices will become more accessible. Here is when housing market prices are going to crash. While this may appear to be an oversimplification, this is how markets operate.
When demand is satisfied, prices fall. In many housing markets, there is an extreme demand for properties at the moment, and there simply aren’t enough homes to sell to prospective buyers. Home construction has been increasing in recent years, but they are so far behind to catch up. Thus, to see significant declines in home prices, we would need to see significant declines in buyer demand.
Demand declines primarily as a result of rising interest rates or a slowing economy in general. Ultimately, for rising interest rates to destroy home values, we’d need substantially less demand and far more housing supply than we presently have. Even if price growth moderates this year, it is extremely improbable that home prices will crash. Thus, there will be no crash in home prices in 2022; rather, there will be a pullback, which is normal for any asset class. The home price growth in the United States is forecasted to just “moderate” or slow down in 2022 and 2023.
Affordability will be a concern for many, as home prices will continue to rise, if at a slower pace than the previous year. With 10 years having now passed since the Great Recession, the U.S. has been on the longest period of continued economic expansion on record. The housing market has been along for much of the ride and continues to benefit greatly from the overall health of the economy.
However, hot economies eventually cool and with that, hot housing markets move more towards balance. Housing market forecasts are essentially informed guesses based on existing patterns. While the real estate pace of last year appears to be reverting to seasonality as we approach 2022, demand is not waning.
Increasing interest rates will almost certainly have a greater impact on the national housing market in 2022 than any other factor. While sellers remain in an advantageous position, price stability and the continuation of competitive interest rates may provide some much-needed relief to buyers this year. Housing supply is and will likely remain a challenge for some time as labor and material shortages, as well as general supply chain issues, delay new construction.
The latest housing market trends show that prices are rising in most parts of the country and most price segments because of the lack of supply. Economic activities are ramping up in all sectors, mortgage rates are rising, and jobs are also recovering. The housing market remains largely a seller’s market due to demand still outpacing supply. The inventory of available houses continues to be a constraint on both buyers and sellers.
Forecasting home price appreciation is a challenging task. While inventory has increased slightly, it remains significantly below pre-pandemic levels and is simply unable to meet current demand. Tight supply following years of underbuilding, combined with increased demand due to remote work, and US demographics — will continue to be a factor in 2022 & 2023. It will continue to be a seller’s real estate market in 2022. Expect to see bidding wars on hot properties for sale, especially in this summer home-buying season.
References
https://www.bankrate.com/mortgages/mortgage-rates/
https://www.freddiemac.com/research/forecast
2022 Housing Market Forecast Midyear Update: More Options for Home Shoppers
https://www.nar.realtor/research-and-statistics/housing-statistics/
https://www.corelogic.com/intelligence/u-s-home-price-insights/
https://www.zillow.com/research/home-value-sales-forecast-july-2022-31240/
https://www.zillow.com/research/daily-market-pulse-26666/
https://www.fhfa.gov/DataTools/Downloads/Pages/House-Price-Index.aspx
http://www.freddiemac.com/research/forecast/20210715_quarterly_economic_forecast.page
https://www.nar.realtor/research-and-statistics/housing-statistics/housing-affordability-index
https://www.investopedia.com/personal-finance/how-millennials-are-changing-housing-market
https://www.freddiemac.com/research/consumer-research/20220617-housing-sentiment-second-quarter-2022
https://www.mba.org/news-and-research/research-and-economics/single-family-research/mortgage-credit-availability-index-x241340
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