Home prices climb to record in pandemic as buyers seek space

“A 0.75 percentage point drop may not seem like a lot, but it's like handing USD 40,000 to a buyer of a $475,000 home, who is able to get more house for the same monthly payment,” said Taylor Marr, senior economist at Redfin. The pandemic also caused sellers to delay putting their homes on the market.


PTI | Newyork | Updated: 14-08-2020 13:43 IST | Created: 14-08-2020 13:43 IST
Home prices climb to record in pandemic as buyers seek space

A renter most of his adult life, Clarence Swann became fearful that landlords would use the coronavirus pandemic as an excuse to gouge their tenants. So, with a desire to move near family, the retired veteran bought his first home last month at the age of 74.

Swann said he used his veteran status to get the loan he needed to buy a USD 196,000 townhouse this summer in the Lake Wylie, South Carolina area. "The first need at my age was I wanted stability," he said.

Swann is one of tens of thousands of buyers who dove into the housing market this spring and summer even as the coronavirus upended the U.S. economy. The presence of these buyers, plus a sharp drop in the numbers of homes on the market, drove home prices to record highs in most parts of the United States, according to an analysis of housing price data by The Associated Press and Core Logic. The average home price in the U.S. in May rose 4.2 per cent compared to a year ago.

The data shows that prices for cheaper homes — those found in the lower third of prices in metropolitan areas and a typical target for first-time buyers — grew faster than the rest of the market, rising 6.7 per cent from a year ago. The coronavirus pandemic helped shape the housing market by influencing everything from the direction of mortgage rates to the inventory of homes on the market to the types of homes in demand and the desired locations.

The pandemic pushed the U.S. economy into a deep recession as many businesses shut down, which in turn forced the hand of the Federal Reserve to dramatically lower interest rates. The average mortgage rate fell from around 3.75 per cent at the beginning of the year to under 3 per cent in a matter of weeks after the pandemic struck the U.S.

That sudden drop in mortgage rates was an instant boon to home affordability, economists said, allowing many buyers to afford much more expensive homes while keeping the same monthly payments. "A 0.75 percentage point drop may not seem like a lot, but it's like handing USD 40,000 to a buyer of a $475,000 home, who is able to get more house for the same monthly payment," said Taylor Marr, senior economist at Redfin.

The pandemic also caused sellers to delay putting their homes on the market. Sellers, who are typically older than buyers, were either concerned about the economy, worried about their jobs, generally reluctant to have strangers enter their homes, or some combination of all three.

The supply of homes available for sale in May dropped nearly 30 per cent from a year earlier. The lack of foreclosed properties for sale was also a minor factor, as states and the federal government-imposed moratoriums on evictions and foreclosures.

"Supply and demand is all out of whack. I have less than a month's supply of homes in my area," said Jay Rinehart, a real estate agent in the Charlotte, N.C. metropolitan area. Like nearly every other industry, real estate came to a halt in March when the country's governors put stay-at-home orders in place. But once those orders were lifted, buyers who were intent on buying in 2020 before the pandemic came back in the market, realtors said.

The boost in home affordability likely played a part in driving up prices for starter homes, or those priced in the lower third of the market. In Washington, DC, real estate agent Sandy Shimono said most of the activity in the last three months has been for homes between USD 400,000 and USD 650,000, which in the expensive DC metro area are considered starter homes.

"Many are tired of renting and finally home affordability seems to be a reachable goal," Shimono said. It's too early to tell whether an exodus from cities to the suburbs will be long-lasting. Many employers have told employees to expect to work remotely until early 2021, with some companies now talking about at least some work done remotely indefinitely.

The pandemic has also temporarily changed the type of homes in demand. Families are looking for homes with rooms, especially if children may be doing remote learning for the foreseeable future. Darin LaFramboise, 35, and his fiance had plans to eventually move from the middle of San Francisco to the suburbs when they had a family.

But the pandemic forced both of them to work remotely and schedule their Zoom meetings around each other so they weren't talking over each other. They hastened their search for a house. "We loved being in the city center, but once interest rates dropped as they did, we started seriously looking," he said.

The couple came up empty at first — even losing out on a property where their bid was USD 200,000 above offer — but eventually found a three bedroom home in Lafayette, California, on a half acre of land 55 minutes from San Francisco's city center by train, for USD 1.65 million. "The downtown (of Lafayette) reminds us a lot of where we lived in SF, and we have access to markets and restaurants just like we used to," he said.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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