Tuesday 13 December 2016

Shaun Vembutty | How rising mortgage rates may not matter for housing

Mortgage rates are now sitting solidly at the highest level in two years and could move even higher in the coming weeks.
Granted, December is not exactly the hottest season for the housing market — homes don't top the holiday gift list — but in January, all eyes move to the all-important spring season. This, coming after the Federal Reserve's expected rate increase on Wednesday.
Even before a Fed move, the average rate on the popular 30-year fixed mortgage shot up from record lows immediately after the presidential election, as investors piled into the stock market and sold out of the bond market [mortgage rates loosely follow the yield of the U.S. 10-year Treasury].
They then continued to move slowly higher, with the resulting move going from about 3.5 percent to now 4.25 percent. The last time rates moved by that much, in June 2013, home sales suffered and house price gains dropped by half.
This time around, however, there is great debate over whether rising rates really matter to housing. After all, increasing rates are indicative of a stronger economy, and a stronger economy favors housing. 



"If interest rates are rising because the economy is growing more rapidly, then, typically, incomes also rise, and the rise in incomes offset the increase in the size of the mortgage payment, and housing goes just fine," said Doug Duncan, chief economist at Fannie Mae, in a recent interview with National Mortgage News.
Income growth is surely a driving factor for home-ownership, but buying a home is the most emotional purchase a consumer can make. While a majority of current and prospective homeowners view the U.S. real estate market favorably, there is greater concern about how an increase in the Fed's benchmark interest rate, expected to be announced Wednesday, will hit housing affordability.
A report released Tuesday by Berkshire Hathaway Home Services, a real estate brokerage, found 76 percent of current homeowners and 79 percent of prospective homeowners cite increasing interest rates as a challenge impacting today's housing market; those are 16 and 8 percentage-point jumps, respectively, from the same time last year — just before the central bank raised its benchmark rate for the first time in nearly a decade.
The survey also showed an increased number of buyers and owners would feel anxious if rates were to rise further. Perception is everything in housing.
"Mortgage rates remain near historic lows, although it may not seem that way to recent, first-time buyers and those considering a home purchase," said Stephen Phillips, president of Berkshire Hathaway Home Services.
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