{"id":4490,"date":"2023-08-20T21:32:59","date_gmt":"2023-08-20T21:32:59","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/frankbuysphilly.com\/higher-mortgage-rates-havent-increased-inventory\/"},"modified":"2023-08-20T21:32:59","modified_gmt":"2023-08-20T21:32:59","slug":"higher-mortgage-rates-havent-increased-inventory","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/frankbuysphilly.com\/higher-mortgage-rates-havent-increased-inventory\/","title":{"rendered":"Higher mortgage rates haven\u2019t increased inventory"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Last week, mortgage rates<\/a> hit a 21st-century high, the 10-year yield closed slightly higher than my peak forecast for 2023<\/a>, and housing inventory growth was still slow. Purchase application data didn\u2019t budge much on the week-to-week data.<\/p>\n Mortgage rates<\/a> have been near or above 7% for the last few months, and active listings growth has been slow during this tenure. I had anticipated active listings growth to be between 11,000 to 17,000 per week with rates this high, and it hasn\u2019t happened. I will keep a close eye to see if the country can achieve some decent weekly active listings data before the seasonal decline in inventory. Last year, the seasonal decline took longer than usual, but 2022 was an abnormal year with mortgage rates.\u00a0<\/p>\n <\/p>\n As noted above, active listings have been negative year over year for some time now, and we are heading toward a seasonal decline. Will higher rates extend the inventory season, or are we going into the traditional seasonal decline?<\/p>\n \n <\/p>\n The new listing data has been trending at the lowest levels ever for over 12 months now. Hopefully, we will have found a bottom in this data line before the year ends. This data line is very seasonal, and we’ve already started the seasonal decline. As long as we see an orderly drop toward the end of the year, I will be happy. The last thing we want to see is more sellers calling it quits faster than the current trend.<\/p>\n Here\u2019s how new listings this week compare to the same week in past years:<\/p>\n <\/p>\n It was a crazy week with mortgage rates as we hit a 21st-century high last week, with mortgage rates hitting 7.37%. To understand how I look at mortgage rates, the Fed, and the 10-year yield, I wrote this article<\/a> last week to give a more detailed view. This topic was so “en vogue” this last week that CNBC<\/strong> asked me to open their Squawk Box show Friday <\/a>morning to go over the issue. Here is the video clip<\/a> of that interview. <\/p>\n With all that’s happening in the market, what should we focus on this week? For me, it\u2019s straightforward \u2014 to see if we could break above 4.34%<\/strong> on the 10-year yield, which was the intraday high last year. The 10-year yield didn\u2019t even touch 4.34% last week, and we closed the week at 4.25%.<\/p>\n \n <\/p>\n Purchase application data<\/strong><\/p>\n Purchase application data was flat last week, making the count year to date at 14 positive<\/strong> and 16 negative <\/strong>prints and 1 flat week<\/strong>. If we start from Nov. 9, 2022<\/a>, it\u2019s been 21 positive<\/strong> prints versus 16 negative<\/strong> prints and one flat week.<\/strong> While home sales aren\u2019t collapsing like they were last year, they\u2019re not growing with mortgage rates this high. Purchase apps are forward-looking for 30-90 days, which means home sales will be stuck near 23-year lows for the rest of the year.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Next week, we have existing and new home sales reports. These two reports will show one big difference in 2023 compared to last year, new home sales are growing yearly while existing home sales still show negative year-over-year prints. This trend should continue this week. <\/p>\n As we head toward the end of the year, we have to remember that last year at this time, home sales were collapsing. So, the year-over-year declines will be less for existing home sales, and new home sales will show solid growth.<\/p>\n\n
Weekly housing inventory<\/h2>\n
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Mortgage rates and bond yields<\/h2>\n
The week ahead: Home sales and the fed <\/h2>\n