More evidence we’re in one the hottest housing markets ever

New Home Construction Ahead Of Housing Start Figures
A "For Sale" sign outside a house under construction at the Norton Commons subdivision in Louisville, Kentucky, U.S., on Tuesday, Feb. 8, 2022.
Luke Sharrett/Bloomberg

A critical lack of single-family homes for sale has created the fastest, priciest housing market on record, with home prices, mortgage payments and other sales metrics reaching all-time highs, a Redfin report revealed.

Homebuyers had an average monthly mortgage payment of $1,997 on houses within the median asking price range for the four week period ending Feb. 13 — the highest amount within that category in Redfin’s data, which dated back to 2012. That monthly payment amount was up 27% from the same time in 2021 when mortgage rates were 2.73% and up 31% from 2020 when rates were 3.47% at the cusp of the pandemic.

The median asking price of newly listed homes also reached a new high of $381K, up 16% since 2021 and 26% from February 2020, just before the onset of the coronavirus pandemic.

Shrinking supply has driven rising prices, experts say, a problem exacerbated by high material costs and labor shortages cutting into new home construction. Active listings are at a record low, with 447,000 homes on the market, a 27% decline from last year and 49% drop from 2020. Redfin Deputy Chief Economist Taylor Marr compared the market to a bathtub, with water, or supply of homes, flowing down the drain faster than new supply can fill it.

“Bottom line: without a flood of new listings we will be sitting in a very shallow bath for a while,” he said in a press release.

Homes today are selling faster than ever, with 57% of home sellers accepting an offer within the first two weeks on the market and 44% accepting within one week, both all-time highs according to Redfin. In total, homes are on the market for a median of 29 days, down from 38 days in 2021 and 60 days in 2020.

Investors chasing single-family rental opportunities put another strain on supply, since they’re competing with prospective homebuyers and paying cash in just over 75% of their purchases. Through the end of January, investors already dedicated $5 billion in their pursuit of single family rental assets, according to John Burns Real Estate Consulting.

Rising mortgage rates could cool demand, Marr said. The average 30-year fixed rate mortgage sits at 3.92%, approaching its highest level since 2019 because of high inflation and consumer spending, Freddie Mac chief economist Sam Khater said earlier this week.

For reprint and licensing requests for this article, click here.
Housing markets Housing inventory
MORE FROM NATIONAL MORTGAGE NEWS