Actual results through July were on track with the forecast, but our analysis suggested the housing market was going to trend weaker than we had previously expected. The forecast was revised downward for the remainder of this year and for 2023. We are now forecasting the single-family starts trend will be negative into 2023. We expect February 2023 to be the seasonal low, and we think it will also represent a cyclical low. However, we are now thinking that appreciable year-over-year gains will not occur until the second half of that year.
Affordability for new and existing homes is becoming an issue sooner than we expected. Mortgage rates are rising more quickly than normal relative to the federal funds rate and prior rising trends (see the next chart). Compounding the issue is the abnormally fast rise in home prices, as evidenced by the Case Shiller US Composite Price Index. The Index’s 19.6% year-over-year increase in May was the highest such rate since 1948. The rapid escalation of prices stems from COVID stimulus money, societal restrictions, and low inventory.
Another issue requiring a downward revision to our housing forecast is appraised values not moving up as quickly as contract prices, creating a cash gap at closing that became increasingly difficult to fill.
Additionally, the percentage decline in investors’ share of single-family home purchases represented an appreciable, and unplanned, withdrawal of demand from the market at the same time consumer demand was abating.
Exacerbating the current situation is the torrid pace at which the Federal Reserve is attempting to compensate for delaying the onset of initiating monetary tightening. It is reminiscent of what Paul Volcker did in the early 1980s, when the Fed intentionally set out to squelch inflation regardless of the near-term impact upon the general economy.
We are anticipating some improvement in the second half of 2023 based on several factors:
A couple of bright spots in the meantime:
What to do: