- With 30-year rates rising again in May, each of the 100 largest
U.S. markets is once again less affordable than its own long-term
average
- Nationally, it now takes 34.2% of the median household income
to make principal and interest (P&I) payments on the
median-priced home purchased with 20% down using a 30-year
fixed-rate mortgage
- According to Optimal Blue rate lock data from Black Knight,
after pulling within 15% of pre-pandemic levels on rate dips
earlier this year, in recent weeks purchase activity fell back to a
34% deficit on shrinking demand
- Likewise, rising borrower credit scores and down payments among
recent rate locks point to the tightening of credit availability
compounding the challenges facing potential homebuyers
- Black Knight Collateral Analytics data showed home sales
volumes fell in April, as a lack of both affordability and
inventory continue to create major market headwinds
- Having worsened in eight of the past nine months on a
seasonally adjusted basis, for-sale inventory is now at its lowest
level since April 2022, with
inventory deteriorating in 95% of major markets since the start of
2023
- This continues to put upward pressure on home prices this
spring, with April marking the fourth consecutive monthly increase
on a seasonally adjusted basis
- April's seasonally adjusted +0.46% increase was roughly on par
with the 30-year average of +0.48% for the month, and would equate
to a 5.5% annualized growth rate if sustained for a 12-month
period
- Despite prices firming, annual growth slipped to 0.0% in April
– marking the first time home prices have been flat year over year
since the market began to recover in the wake of the Great
Financial Crisis
- Price strengthening this spring has erased more than 60% of the
declines seen late last year at the national level, and at the
current rate of growth would fully erase those corrections by
mid-2023
JACKSONVILLE, Fla., June 5, 2023
/PRNewswire/ -- Today, the Data & Analytics division of Black
Knight, Inc. (NYSE:BKI) released its latest Mortgage Monitor
Report, based on the company's industry-leading mortgage, real
estate and public records data sets. With the spring homebuying
season defying historical norms, this month's report looks at the
intersection of affordability, inventory, demand and credit
availability. As Black Knight Vice President of Enterprise Research
Andy Walden explains, the challenges
facing homebuyers – and the real estate and housing finance
industries more widely – are only becoming more deeply entrenched
as the months go on.
"In a sense, the gridlocked housing market has been feeding on
itself," said Walden. "While elevated interest rates continue to
weigh on both affordability and demand, they're simultaneously
constricting supply as well as would-be sellers who locked in
ultra-low rates early in the pandemic and continue to sit on the
sidelines. The combination of lower supply and demand in April led
to both slowing sales and firming prices. In fact, while home sales
dipped, April marked the fourth consecutive month of home price
gains, which are now almost universally rising across the country
again on a seasonally adjusted basis. Only Austin, Texas – the sole market where
inventory is back above pre-pandemic levels – is still seeing
meaningful price corrections continuing into the spring. In today's
market, interest rates are acting as a double-edged sword, reducing
or increasing both demand and supply as they rise and fall, making
it challenging to find a rate-driven path to easing affordability
and home prices.
"Amidst all of this, we're also beginning to see clear signs of
tightening credit availability. Our Optimal Blue rate lock data
shows that average credit scores and down payments are on the rise,
with tightening credit compounding the significant challenges
already facing potential home buyers and the origination market
alike. According to our McDash loan-level mortgage performance
dataset, April purchase credit scores were the highest on record,
dating back to 2000, when Black Knight first started tracking the
metric. Pullbacks in purchase rate lock volumes have continued,
dropping 11% from the week ending March
25 to the week ending May 20,
in what would typically be the heart of the homebuying season.
Indeed, purchase locks have fallen back down to more than 30% below
pre-pandemic levels, after pulling to within 15% on rate dips in
mid-January and mid-March. Demand is obviously suffering, and the
fact that this spring's strengthening home prices have erased more
than 60% of the 'correction' seen late last year isn't likely to
help much on that front."
This month's report also dives deeper into housing market trends
at the geographical level. Along the West Coast, where inventory
levels have pulled back again this spring, prices have begun to
rise again, reversing some of the correction in prices from late
last year. San Jose, Calif. –
among the metros that saw the largest price corrections in 2022 –
ranked in the top 20% of markets in terms of single-month
seasonally adjusted price gains in April (+0.8%), while
San Diego prices were up by 0.9%
and Seattle by +0.7% in the month.
Hartford, Conn. (+1.3%) – the
market with the largest inventory deficit nationwide, with 81%
fewer active listings compared to pre-pandemic levels – experienced
the largest single-month price gains, followed by Milwaukee (+1.2%), Detroit (+1.1%), Cleveland (+0.9%) – the most affordable market
compared to its long-run average – Columbus, Ohio (+.9%), and Boston (+.9%). If sustained, Hartford's monthly gains would equate to an
annual home price growth rate of 15.3%, again sparking the risk of
a reheating housing market should inventory shortages persist.
Much more information on these and other topics can be found in
this month's Mortgage Monitor.
About the Mortgage Monitor
The Data & Analytics division of Black Knight manages the
nation's leading repository of loan-level residential mortgage data
and performance information covering the majority of the overall
market, including tens of millions of loans across the spectrum of
credit products and more than 160 million historical records. The
combined insight of the Black Knight HPI and Collateral Analytics'
home price and real estate data provides one of the most complete,
accurate and timely measures of home prices available, covering 95%
of U.S. residential properties down to the ZIP-code level. In
addition, the company maintains one of the most robust public
property records databases available, covering 99.9% of the U.S.
population and households from more than 3,100 counties.
Black Knight's research experts carefully analyze this data to
produce a summary supplemented by dozens of charts and graphs that
reflect trend and point-in-time observations for the monthly
Mortgage Monitor Report. To review the full report, visit:
https://www.blackknightinc.com/data-reports/
About Black Knight
Black Knight, Inc. (NYSE:BKI) is an
award-winning software, data and analytics company that drives
innovation in the mortgage lending and servicing and real estate
industries, as well as the capital and secondary markets.
Businesses leverage our robust, integrated solutions across the
entire homeownership life cycle to help retain existing customers,
gain new customers, mitigate risk and operate more effectively.
Our clients rely on our proven, comprehensive, scalable products
and our unwavering commitment to delivering superior client support
to achieve their strategic goals and better serving their
customers. For more information on Black Knight, please visit
www.blackknightinc.com/.
For more information:
|
Michelle Kersch
|
Mitch
Cohen
|
904.854.5043
|
704.890.8158
|
michelle.kersch@bkfs.com
|
mitch.cohen@bkfs.com
|
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SOURCE Black Knight, Inc.