Economist: U.S. Home Prices Still Face A ‘Steep and Sustained’ Decline This Year

Published by FOX Business | July 14, 2023

Economist warns 'the bulk of the drop in home prices is yet to come'

The U.S. housing market has defied expectations for a crash so far this year, but a steep decline in home prices could be right around the corner, according to a new analyst note from Pantheon Macroeconomics.

In contrast to the widespread belief that the housing market has already hit bottom and is now in the midst of a recovery, Pantheon economist Kieran Clancy argued that the better-than-expected performance seen this spring was merely the result of “aggressive discounts and a lack of resale inventory – not an actual housing market recovery.”

“We are baffled by the emerging narrative in the commentariat that housing is now recovering, because it isn’t,” Clancy wrote in the note. “Home sales jumped at the start of the year, lagging the late-2022 dip in mortgage rates, but they have fallen more recently thanks to the latest back-up in rates, and mortgage applications signal that they will soon dip to a new cycle low.”

For the housing market to truly recover, affordability needs to improve. A recent report from real estate analytics firm ATTOM suggests that affordability declined again in the spring as the price of a median single-family house surged to $350,000 in the second quarter. That represents a 10% jump from the previous quarter, one of the biggest increases in the past decade.

The portion of average wages required to own a home, meanwhile, skyrocketed to 33% in the period from April to June. That marks the highest debt-to-income ratio since 2007, meaning the market is the least affordable for Americans in nearly two decades.

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