The combination of rising interest rates and surging housing prices drove the most rapid decline in affordability in more than 30 years, according to First American.
Researchers at the real estate services provider determined that affordability decreased 30.6% year over year in February, the largest margin since First American began tracking the metric. On a monthly basis, First American’s Real House Price Index, or RHPI, which tracks price changes of single-family properties in the U.S. adjusted for the impact of income and interest-rate changes, found housing costs up by 5.8% from January to February. An increase in real-house prices corresponds to a decline in affordability.
The upswing in interest rates contributed significantly to February’s RHPI increase, said Mark Fleming, chief economist at First American. “Rising mortgage rates impact both housing supply and demand, limiting supply by reducing the propensity of homeowners to sell and flattening demand by reducing consumer house-buying power,” he said in a press release.
Income gains are not coming close to keeping up with the amount of price hikes over the past 12 months either. “Even though household income has increased 5.1% since February 2021 and boosted consumer house-buying power, it was not enough to offset the affordability loss from higher rates and rapidly rising nominal prices,” Fleming said.
And as the February index recorded its largest rise in over 30 years, mortgage rates began accelerating at an even more rapid pace in March.
The recent developments now seem to be producing a noticeable effect on the purchase market. Purchase demand has recently decreased based on the latest
Despite the dramatic drop in affordability and the steadily climbing interest rates, current home-buying power is not terribly far off from 2018 levels, Fleming said. Recent trends, including sub-3% interest rates, were “anything but normal from a historical perspective,” Fleming said.
“The last two years were the exception, not the rule, and the housing market is adjusting to a not-so-new normal.”