Business

U.S. existing home sales at a 30-year low, but metro Denver holding its own


AUSTIN — U.S. existing home sales have reached their lowest levels in nearly 30 years, despite a surge of millennials entering their prime homebuying years, and activity likely won’t bounce back until interest rates start coming down.

“I thought by this time the housing market would be recovering. It has not yet recovered. Home sales are still down from last year,” said Lawrence Yun, chief economic with the National Association of Realtors, speaking Thursday at the annual conference of the National Association of Real Estate Editors in Austin.

The Federal Reserve gave guidance in December that it might cut rates three to four times in 2024. But inflation has remained more persistent than expected, and forecasts are now down to one or two cuts this year, Yun said.

Although the country has 70 million more people than in 1995, existing home sales nationally are now at levels seen in that year, he said.

Selma Hepp, chief economist at CoreLogic, called 2024 “the year of the head fake” when it comes to housing.

“We started the year expecting a recovery in the housing market. It turned out to be more of the same. Mortgage markets remain elevated,” she said at NAREE.

Rates matter because monthly payments are running about 80% higher for the exact same home than they were prior to the big jump in mortgage rates, Hepp said.

Metro Denver seems to be holding up better. There were 17,148 closings through the first five months of the year, according to the Denver Metro Association of Realtors. That is down from 23,767 closings in the first five months of 2021, a peak year.

Closings are down 1.9% year-over-year for the first five months, but they are still ahead of the pace seen between 2015 and 2019.

Hepp said even if sales aren’t picking up steam, home prices are. Her forecast calls for a 5.7% gain nationally, describing it as “another really robust year” for home prices.

The inventory of homes is growing, which should give buyers more options and could lift sales, especially if rates come down. Metro Denver has 3.4 times as many listings this year as it had in the first five months of 2021.

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Source:: The Denver Post – Business

      

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