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  3. Booming Home Sales Again in 2022?

Booming Home Sales Again in 2022?

Submitted by Bernhardt Wealth Management on December 20th, 2021
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Arguably the wildest consequence of the recent pandemic is the remarkable price boom in the US housing market—which, some might remember, went spectacularly bust in the 2008-09 Great Recession collapse. As recently as this past summer, half of all houses put on the market were being purchased in less than a week, often for more than the asking price. One recent poll found that20211220 ForSaleSoldHome-BigStock.jpg most buyers admitted to bidding on homes they’d never seen in person. Home prices are at record highs; inventories are at record lows. More than half of homes on the market have been selling above the asking price—which is so far above the previous record that the statistic is simply offered in isolation. The average home price, as measured by the S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller 20-city index, rose 13.3% in a single month, following a 12% jump the previous month.

One driving factor is historically low mortgage rates, around and sometimes below 3% currently. Investors have also stepped in; they bought 17% of all homes in April, and some might re-label them speculators who believe (as many did in the runup to 2008) that prices have nowhere to go but up—forever.

But beyond that, prices have been driven up by simple economics and the laws of supply and demand. The number of homes for sale fell 21% recently, near a record low that dates back to 1982. New home construction has been slow due to a severe lumber shortage, and we are still feeling the effects from 12 years ago, when the Great Recession knocked the construction industry back on its heels. At the same time, millennials—many of them too financially-constrained to have bought houses at normal interest rates—are storming into the housing market, ending forever the trope of boomerang kids living in their parents’ basement.

Does all this signal another housing bubble? Are we now destined to live through another Great Recession when a housing bubble bursts? Fortunately, there are a few checks and balances on the current boom that were not in place back in 2006-07 when the seeds of the Great Recession were planted. For one thing, lenders are no longer handing out mortgage loans like candy, with zero documentation. Today’s lending standards are higher even than the requirements of the Dodd-Frank Act of 2010, which was passed in response to the financial crisis. Loans today are generally smaller in proportion to house values, and leverage is down on owners’ balance sheets. You can see the difference in the accompanying table; today’s mortgage credit availability looks nothing like it did during the previous residential housing boom years.

20211220 MortgageCreditChart.jpgAccording to Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the National Association of Realtors®, housing prices are likely to increase in the coming year, though perhaps not at the dizzying pace of the past several months. At a recent association conference, Yun estimates that the housing market is likely to normalize somewhat in 2022, with home sales still exceeding pre-pandemic levels. "With more housing inventory to hit the market, the intense multiple offers will start to ease … Home prices will continue to rise, but at a slower pace."

That doesn’t mean that housing prices won’t collapse at some point in the future. One possible trigger would be a sudden rise in mortgage rates, which would cool demand significantly. But even that wouldn’t trigger defaults; according to the Mortgage Bankers Association, just 0.1% of mortgage loans issued this year are tied to adjustable rates. That’s compared to about 60% during the bubble years of the mid-2000s.

Whether your plans for 2022 include a new home, a new business, or entering retirement, we at Bernhardt Wealth Management send every wish for a joyous, peaceful, and prosperous holiday season. At this and every other time of year, our chief aim is to provide financial guidance for our clients, offered with their best interests foremost. If we can provide assistance or answers for your important financial questions, please contact us.

Buen Camino, and Happy Holidays!

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