‘Home price growth may return to normalcy.’ 5 economists and real estate pros predict what will happen in the housing market in 2022

 
 

Predictions on mortgage rates, housing prices, and more.

It’s been a wild ride for home buyers and aspiring home buyers over the past year, with bidding wars and rising prices — as interest rates held near historic lows (see the lowest rates you might qualify for here). Here’s what five economists and real estate pros told us they thought would happen in 2022.

Prediction 1: Mortgage rates will rise

“Mortgage rates snapped upward in January as mortgage investors realized what the Fed intends to do, which is raise interest rates aggressively this year,” says Holden Lewis, home and mortgage expert at NerdWallet. “Now, mortgage rates are rising more gradually as markets wait for the Fed to clarify their timetable.”

“For perspective, the 30-year mortgage averaged 4.09% in the 2010s and 12.71% in the 1980s, people bought plenty of houses in both eras,” says Lewis. This month, Bankrate’s chief financial analyst Greg McBride says he expects 30-year fixed rate mortgages to average between 3.65% and 3.85%, with the 15-year fixed ranging between 2.8% and 3%. “The bulk of these rate increase moves were made in January as markets reset their expectations on the Federal Reserve. Moves in the next few weeks, however, should be more subdued,” says McBride.

But with rates rising for the past few months, reaching their highest levels since March 2020, Gregory Heym, chief economist at Brown Harris Stevens, says they are likely to continue to rise as the Federal Reserve tapers its bond purchases, which will lead to a rate hike most likely in March. Of course, mortgages go up and down week to week, but Lewis says: “Expect more up weeks than down weeks in 2022.”  (See the lowest rates you might qualify for here.)

Even though the Fed doesn’t directly control mortgage rates, the overall tightening policy of stopping the purchase of mortgage-backed securities and raising of the short-term Fed funds rate will push mortgage rates up. In fact, Lawrence Yun, chief economist at the National Association of Realtors, says: “The average rate on a 30-year fixed rate mortgage is likely to reach 3.8% by the fourth quarter.”

Prediction 2: Home price growth may ‘return to normalcy’

Heym says the market is suffering from record-low inventory levels, which has driven prices to new highs even as the number of sales has declined. “I don’t expect this to change in the next few months as home builders can’t build houses fast enough to help the supply issue,” says Heym. Specifically, Yun says home prices are solidly higher by double-digit percentages compared to one ago. “However, with mortgage rates moving up and some home buyers getting priced out, home price growth will return to normalcy, to around 5% for all of 2022,” says Yun.

Prediction 3: Expect near-term bidding wars

The clock is also ticking as 2021 interest rate locks with 60-90 day expirations are set to mature any day. But what does this mean for buyers? Essentially, they’re rushing and overbidding on properties in the hopes of securing a low interest rate before the next Fed increase. “This is causing bidding war frenzies,” says Pierre Debbas, managing partner of real estate law firm Romer Debbas LLP. 

Prediction 4: It will still be a tough market for buyers though

Buyers will continue to have limited options in most areas as inventory will remain scarce, pros say. “Prices will continue to rise, which combined with higher mortgage rates, will drive some buyers out of the market,” says Heym. That said, it will continue to be a strong seller’s market, which means if you’ve been thinking about listing your home — there’s no time like the present. 

While power will remain firmly in the hands of sellers this year, according to Nicole Bachaud, a Zillow economist, prices will rise substantially. “We’re seeing monthly growth accelerate earlier in the year than normal, but we don’t expect they’ll rise quite as much as they did in 2021,” says Bachaud. According to data from Zillow, home values in 2021 ended up 19.6% for the year and the forecast calls for 16.4% growth in 2022.

Prediction 5: But there are still wildcards

The big wildcard is the permanency of work-from-home policies or even hybrid models of employment. “That will lead to changes in residential locational choices with more households willing to buy a home farther away from job locations and home price growth therefore will be stronger in small towns and exurbs compared to downtown locations,” says Yun.

Prediction 6: Spring will bring more activity

With the spring home shopping season right around the corner, expect activity to heat up. “It’s likely inventory and sales will pick up over the next few months,” says Bachaud.

Learn more on Market Watch.

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Millennial Demand Is Driving Prices Up in Neighborhoods With Kids

 
 

With a record number of millennials set to reach key age milestones for homebuyers over the next two years, experts say this could push already accelerated price gains even further. 

This, according to a new report from Zillow that found home values are growing fastest in areas with the highest share of kids, reflects the impact millennial house hunters are making on family-friendly neighborhoods already experiencing a shortage of homes for sale.

According to the report, the top 10% of ZIP codes with the largest share of kids in each county analyzed saw an average of 21.3% growth from October 2020 to October 2021, compared to 17.6% in ZIP codes with the smallest share of kids. This trend started in 2013, which, not coincidentally, was the year the oldest millennials turned 32, the age when many new parents buy their first homes. That’s the median age of first-time home buyers and one year older than the median age of fathers with newborns, Zillow’s report stated.

“As millennials go, so goes the housing market, and we are seeing now, as millennials age, that they are looking for homes that fit the needs of growing families,” said Zillow economist Nicole Bachaud. “Millennial demand has helped push up home prices in areas with the most children. Competition for homes in these family-friendly areas should intensify in the coming years as more millennials reach the key age of 32, adding to the affordability squeeze.”

Zillow’s report analyzed 421 U.S. counties, representing 71% of the country’s population. ZIP codes with more residents under 18 years old are associated with higher home value growth in nearly two-thirds of the counties studied. Many of the counties where this relationship does not hold true are vacation destinations, where part-time residents have unconventional housing demands. Home value growth in these family-friendly areas began to outpace nearby ZIP codes in 2013, and the correlation between kids and home value growth has been nearly perfect for each year since 2017, according to the report.

That first wave of early-30s millennials had the benefit of discounted home prices because of the Great Recession; home values in these family-friendly ZIP codes were hit particularly hard between 2008 and 2011, during the nationwide housing crash. Today’s first-time home buyers are encountering a much different market, especially as home price growth has reached record highs during the pandemic.

Kristi Ramirez-Knowles, a REALTOR® and team leader for Your Home Sold Guaranteed Realty working in West Los Angeles, told RISMedia late last year that millennials are often forced to look at areas near or abutting these traditional family-friendly zip codes, because the most attractive markets have no homes within their budget.

“It’s pushed further,” she says. “Other places where it wasn’t very family friendly, now it’s starting to get very family friendly because they’re building brand new construction with everything built in—with the pool and the rec room, and that’s drawing to those areas. That’s attracting families even though the school district may not be that great. It’s the appeal of brand-new and something they can afford.”

That also seems to be the case on the other side of the country, as Virginia-based agent Kathryn Kramer with Howard Hanna, suggests that the Norfolk housing market has seen similar behavior.

“I think that this effect is compounded by two factors,” Kramer says. “Empty-nesters are more hesitant to move because of the pandemic, and we have fewer of those homes on the market. Also, more millennials are working from home which has allowed markets like ours to flourish because people who can now work remotely are moving to areas that have better schools and amenities and a lower cost of living.”

Kramer went on to say that some of the neighborhoods that are not traditionally thought of as first choices for families are going to start improving as people start getting priced out of other neighborhoods.

The snowball of millennials reaching peak age for first-time home buyers has grown during the past nine years and is about to turn into an avalanche, Zillow reported. Nearly 200,000 more Americans will turn 32 this year than did so in 2021―the biggest jump since the transition from Generation X to millennials in 2013—and even more will do so in 2023. This demographic reality should fuel even faster price growth in family-friendly ZIP codes over the next two years, making saving for a down payment even more challenging for first-time buyers.

This effect, the report states, is strongest in counties that encompass the cities of Norfolk, Virginia; Washington, D.C.; Portland, Oregon; Austin, Texas; and Seattle. Counties where this trend does not hold true include those encompassing Galveston, Texas; Santa Barbara, California; and Ocean City, New Jersey.

Read more on RISMedia.

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Spring cleaning in 2022: 3 methods designed to declutter your home and mind

 
 

With spring fast approaching, it’s understandable that many of us want to get our homes and minds as clear as possible – and these decluttering techniques are designed to help.

It might not feel like it now, but we’re rapidly speeding towards spring – which is, famously, considered to be a time of renewal.

It’s around this time that many of us will be hit by the sudden urge to declutter our homes, but it can be difficult to know where to begin, especially when you suddenly realise just how much stuff you truly own.

How, then, should we go about getting rid of things we no longer need? Why, by striving to make our home environment an extension of who we are and opting for a meditative decluttering method, of course. 

Oosouji

In Japan, there is a practice called oosouji, which literally means “big cleaning.”

According to Ayin, this is usually conducted at the end of each year or school term, and it asks people to not just sweep away dust but to clean away the negative energy of the past. 

In doing so, the hope is that they will declutter their homes, hearts and minds ready for the new year ahead.

How to cultivate oosouji in your home:

  • As per Ayin, we must always start the oosouji ritual by the entrance of each room and “work our way clockwise to end where we started, with a fresh state-of-mind.”

  • Work from the top of the house and downwards (begin by dusting off the ceilings, and so on).

  • Focus on removing all stains from furniture and homeware (they are said to “remind you of the past in a negative way”).

  • Place boxes in all rooms for items that are no longer needed. When you’re done, drop these boxes of at a charity shop.

  • Set one box aside for rubbish, too, and be sure to remove it immediately whenever you finish with a room.

FlyLady

The FlyLady technique – so named due to founder Marla Cilley’s love of fly fishing – works by breaking all household tasks into small, manageable increments.

However, it also works as a self-love exercise – which is why it has been retroactive rechristened the “Finally Loving Yourself (FLY)” technique. 

How to cultivate the FlyLady technique in your home:

  • As previously reported by Stylist, the technique starts with “babysteps”, some 31 small things that can be done around the house every week in order to build up your decluttering habit. Breaking it up into smaller duties makes it more manageable, says FlyLady, providing you with a sense of peace.

  • Separate your home into five different zones. The first week of the month is dedicated to zone one. Set aside 15 minutes a day to eliminate any clutter that has accumulated throughout your home. Repeat with zone two the following week, and so on until the month is complete.

  • Ensure you are only cleaning for 15 minutes at a time, and be sure to use a timer to keep track. This should not be a rushed and stressful process.

The KonMari method

The KonMari Method is Marie Kondo’s minimalist-inspired approach to tackling your stuff category-by-category rather than room-by-room.

The aim? To be left with a home filled with items that “spark joy.” 

How to cultivate the KonMari method in your home:

  • As per Marie Kondo’s website, we must begin the process by committing ourselves to tidying up.

  • Imagine your ideal lifestyle and keep that in mind throughout; anything that won’t help you on this journey isn’t deserving of your space or you.

  • Remember, it’s only after you’ve discarded can you turn your full energy and attention to that which brings you joy. Go through and get rid of items you no longer need or cherish, and remember to do so with gratitude.

  • Tidy by category – clothes, books, papers, komono (miscellaneous items) and then sentimental items – not location. And always, always follow this order.

  • Create an environment that makes you happy by going through all items and asking if they spark joy. Of course, joy looks different to everyone; however, Kondo herself describes it on her website as “a little thrill, as if the cells in your body are slowly rising.

For even more cleaning methods, visit Stylist UK.

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Colorado housing inventory hit 'shocking' low in January

 
 

In Broomfield, there were just eight new listings for the entire month in January.

The low housing inventory seen in Colorado remains “unprecedented and shocking” to even the state’s most experienced realtors, the Colorado Association of Realtors said in its new January report.

New listings that came in January were quickly gobbled up as pending or under-contract sales.

Statewide, just 4,151 single-family properties were listed — a 44.5% dip from January 2021, when 7,480 single-family homes were listed. That’s about half as many as the 14,520 single-family listings in Colorado pre-pandemic.

The 1,011 active condo and townhome listings were down more than 68% from 3,173 listings a year ago. January 2020 saw 5,097 attached home listings.

In the seven-county Denver-metro area, just over 1,400 single-family homes were available in January, down 57% from a year ago. There were just 461 condo or townhome properties listed, off 74% from January 2021.

For Colorado and the Denver metro, just half a month's supply of inventory is on the market, which once again represents a record low. A balanced market, according to the National Association of Realtors, would have about six months of inventory supply.

The CAR Monthly Market Statistical Reports are prepared by a third-party real estate technology company and are based on data provided by Multiple Listing Services (MLS) in Colorado.

The record-low inventory is driving up prices. The median pricing held steady from December to January, while year-over-year median pricing is about 17% to 19% higher. Condo or townhome properties are on the higher end of that range.

CAR’s Housing Affordability Index — a measure of how affordable a region’s housing is to consumers based on interest rates, median sales price and median income by county — is down 22% from a year prior for the Denver metro and for the state.

New data from the National Association of Realtors found that there are 400,000 fewer homes that would be considered affordable for those that earn between $75,000 and $100,000 nationally compared to the start of the pandemic.

Some local markets showed staggering lows. In Broomfield, for example, there were just eight new listings for the entire month in January.

Kelly Moye, a realtor who works in the Broomfield and Boulder area, said that while the story of low inventory and high demand has been happening for about two years now, the lows that Boulder and Broomfield are hitting are still unprecedented.

“First, there are eight new listings for the entire month of January in Broomfield. Eight listings. That is a number that many realtors carry on their own for the month, not the entire real estate community, combined,” Moye wrote in her commentary. “With only eight new listings and a few new construction homes still on the market from December, the mad rush to buy in this area has pushed the prices up by a whopping 36% since last January.”

She added that the 1,100 homes destroyed by the Marshall fire have only exacerbated the issue.

In all of Superior — one of the communities hit hard by the fire — there are just two listings for sale and 23 under contract. Shortly after the fire, Moye told the Denver Business Journal that the fire made a tight for-sale and rental housing market in the Boulder County region even tighter.

The CAR report is in line with the Denver Metro Association of Realtors report released at the beginning of February, which said that the Denver metro hit a new record low in January of just 1,184 listing at the end of the month. Both reports have their own methodologies, and the DMAR report includes 11 counties in the Denver metro area.

Keep reading here.

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Colorado Springs apartment rents dipped late last year

 
 

The cost to rent a Colorado Springs apartment declined in the fourth quarter of 2021, as nearly 1,000 new units came on the market during the period and possibly helped slow rents from their record-setting pace earlier in the year.

Local rents averaged $1,471.19 a month from October through December, according to a survey of landlords and apartment owners by Ron Throupe, an associate business professor at the University of Denver's Daniels College of Business, and Jennifer Von Stroh of Colorado Economic & Management Associates in Denver.

Fourth quarter rents in the Springs were down by nearly $25 a month from the record high of $1,495.71 in the third quarter of 2021, the report shows. Also, it was the first time since the start of last year that rents had failed to set a quarterly record.

On the one hand, fourth quarter rents typically decline from the third quarter because fewer people tend to look for apartments late in the year, industry experts have said. When demand slows, landlords ease off on rents.

At the same time, 975 apartments were completed in the fourth quarter and added to the overall supply of units available for rent — one of the largest numbers of new units for any quarter on record, according to the University of Denver report.

For all of 2021, the area's inventory swelled by 2,107 apartments — the most for any year in at least a decade and possibly longer, based on historical data included in the report.

As a result, some landlords and apartment owners might have maintained rents or lowered them in areas of Colorado Springs where an influx of new units opened, said Laura Nelson, executive director of the Apartment Association of Southern Colorado.

"If they see large numbers (of apartments) being added in certain areas, obviously they're going to have to become competitive," Nelson said of landlords and apartment owners.

Even with the 2,107 units added last year, the Colorado Springs area still needs more apartments to meet the demand, she said. 

And without an increase in the supply of apartments, rents have nowhere to go but up because the demand for multifamily living, in general, is through the roof, Nelson added.

Many young people have shown they want to rent because they don't want to be tied to a long-term mortgage, while empty nesters and area residents who want maintenance-free living like apartments, too, industry experts have said.  

"We need more supply, period," Nelson said. "We're still way behind. But this (additional fourth-quarter units) is evidence that it will have an effect (on rents)."

Going forward in 2022, Nelson said it's difficult to predict what might happen to rents. 

If developers and builders have difficulty completing apartments because of supply chain issues, and if some projects are delayed, owners and landlords might see inventory tighten again and could raise rents as a result, she said.

Then again, apartment owners and landlords prefer to rent their units in the summer, rather than the fall and winter, Nelson said. If they want to fill up their units before year's end, they might hold off on summer rent increases as an incentive for renters, she said.

"It can go either way," Nelson said.

Visit The Gazette to learn more.

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