Homebuying sentiment cratered to a two-year low in April, with over three-fourths of consumers indicating that it was a bad time to make a purchase, according to researchers at Fannie Mae.
Fannie Mae’s Home Purchase Sentiment Index, or HPSI, which is based on surveys of U.S. consumers that cover opinions about the buying and selling of homes, interest rates, housing costs, employment outlook and household income, dropped to its lowest overall level since the early weeks of the coronavirus pandemic in May 2020, the government-sponsored enterprise said. The index tumbled 6.4% from 73.2 in March to 68.5 in April, marking the third consecutive month the HPSI decreased.
Regarding current views of the purchase market, the percentage of respondents who said it was a bad time to buy increased to 76% from 73% in March, while those calling it a good time to buy decreased to 19% from 24%, a net 8-percentage-point drop in “good” sentiment.
“The current lack of entry-level supply and the rapid uptick in mortgage rates appear to be adversely impacting potential first-time homebuyers in particular, evidenced by the larger share of younger respondents (aged 18 to 34) reporting that it’s a ‘bad time to buy a home,’ " Doug Duncan, Fannie Mae's chief economist, said in a press release.
But the uptick in pessimism is driven by more than high housing costs, Duncan noted. “Consumer perception regarding the ease of getting a mortgage also decreased across nearly all surveyed segments this month, suggesting to us that the benefit of the recent past’s historically low mortgage rate environment appears to have diminished, and affordability is poised to become an even greater constraint going forward,” Duncan added.
In fact, Fannie Mae’s HPSI slid, even as a growing percentage of consumers thought the costs of homes might have peaked. The net share of survey respondents who said home prices would rise in the next year dropped 9 percentage points month over month, with 25% saying prices will fall compared to 20% in March, and only 44% who thought they would rise, down from 48%.
While actual home costs might be easing, the rapidly accelerating mortgage rates have quickly
Data released last week by Redfin showed that the
And more consumers don’t believe mortgage rates will decline any time soon, according to Fannie Mae, with the net share of Americans thinking rates will go up in the next year, rising by 3% in April from the previous month. While 5% of survey respondents said rates would head downward, up from March’s 4% share, the percentage of those thinking rates would continue their upward trajectory, increased to 73% from 69%.
Sellers seemed to be no more optimistic than buyers either. Fannie Mae said the share indicating that it was a good period to sell in April decreased to 72% from 74%, while those saying it was an inopportune time remained the same at 21%.
Meanwhile, as
The Home Purchase Sentiment Index findings largely correlated to homebuying trends Fannie Mae had been
“This sentiment is consistent with our forecast of decelerating home sales through the rest of 2022 and into 2023,” Duncan said.