New And Existing Home Sales: Fact Vs. Spin

 | Apr 27, 2021 01:15AM ET

Existing home sales, reported last Thursday, were down 3.7% from February (down 6.3% in February). Wall St was thinking they would rise 0.8%. The seasonally adjusted annualized sales rate dropped to 7-month lows.

The reason for struggling existing home sales is three-fold. First, and most obvious, is rising mortgage rates. If the Fed had not been throwing at least $80 billion per month at the mortgage market, mortgage rates would have been rising since last April and would be much higher than current mortgage rates.

This would have prevented the double digit housing price inflation of the last 12 months, which to a large degree is starting to “freeze” housing market activity.

The other two reasons are creations of the Fed and the Government. Existing home inventory fell to 900k homes, down more than 28% from a year ago. I saw a statistic a couple weeks ago that said there’s now more realtors than homes on the market.

The primary culprit for the low inventory is affordability—both price and monthly expense. Most households that might otherwise look to buy a move-up home can no longer afford to do so. So there’s no reason for them to sell their house until it becomes unaffordable to maintain. This may be moot anyway because many potential first-time buyers can no longer afford to buy a home period.

Existing home prices were up 18.4% from last March, though down 4.3% from February (nationally, I know some areas are still seeing crazy price increases). While supply and demand are one of the drivers of price, the north of $1 trillion the Fed has thrown at the housing market since last March is the main driver of price.

That, and the fact that the Government has removed debt-to-income and down payment restrictions for conforming Fannie/Freddie mortgages. In addition, the loan limit was raised again this year, which enables homebuyers to take out an even bigger mortgage than last year if they can qualify for a conforming mortgage.

Private-label mortgages are more expensive but they’re even more liberal with loan-to-value restrictions. The latter dynamic is a direct creature of the Fed.