Current:Home > Contact2022 marked the end of cheap mortgages and now the housing market has turned icy cold -ProfitSphere Academy
2022 marked the end of cheap mortgages and now the housing market has turned icy cold
View
Date:2025-04-12 21:10:41
Evan Paul and his wife entered 2022 thinking it would be the year they would finally buy a home.
The couple — both scientists in the biotech industry — were ready to put roots down in Boston.
"We just kind of got to that place in our lives where we were financially very stable, we wanted to start having kids and we wanted to just kind of settle down," says Paul, 34.
This year did bring them a baby girl, but that home they dreamed of never materialized.
High home prices were the initial insurmountable hurdle. When the Pauls first started their search, low interest rates at the time had unleashed a buying frenzy in Boston, and they were relentlessly outbid.
"There'd be, you know, two dozen other offers and they'd all be $100,000 over asking," says Paul. "Any any time we tried to wait until the weekend for an open house, it was gone before we could even look at it."
Then came the Fed's persistent interest rates hikes. After a few months, with mortgage rates climbing, the Pauls could no longer afford the homes they'd been looking at.
"At first, we started lowering our expectations, looking for even smaller houses and even less ideal locations," says Paul, who eventually realized that the high mortgage rates were pricing his family out again.
"The anxiety just caught up to me and we just decided to call it quits and hold off."
Buyers and sellers put plans on ice
The sharp increase in mortgage rates has cast a chill on the housing market. Many buyers have paused their search; they can longer afford home prices they were considering a year ago. Sellers are also wary of listing their homes because of the high mortgage rates that would loom over their next purchase.
"People are stuck," says Lawrence Yun, chief economist with the National Association of Realtors.
Yun and others describe the market as frozen, one in which home sales activity has declined for 10 months straight, according to NAR. It's the longest streak of declines since the group started tracking sales in the late 1990s.
"The sellers aren't putting their houses on the market and the buyers that are out there, certainly the power of their dollar has changed with rising interest rates, so there is a little bit of a standoff," says Susan Horowitz, a New Jersey-based real estate agent.
Interestingly, the standoff hasn't had much impact on prices.
Home prices have remained mostly high despite the slump in sales activity because inventory has remained low. The inventory of unsold existing homes fell for a fourth consecutive month in November to 1.14 million.
"Anything that comes on the market is the one salmon running up stream and every bear has just woken up from hibernation," says Horowitz.
But even that trend is beginning to crack in some markets.
At an open house for a charming starter home in Hollywood one recent weekend, agent Elijah Shin didn't see many people swing through like he did a year ago.
"A year ago, this probably would've already sold," he says. "This home will sell, too. It's just going to take a little bit longer."
Or a lot longer.
The cottage first went on the market back in August. Four months later, it's still waiting for an offer.
veryGood! (25)
Related
- Paris Hilton, Nicole Richie return for an 'Encore,' reminisce about 'The Simple Life'
- 5 Things podcast: Anti-science rhetoric heavily funded, well-organized. Can it be stopped?
- Arizona Diamondbacks take series of slights into surprise World Series against Texas Rangers
- Gunman opens fire on city of Buffalo vehicle, killing one employee and wounding two others
- Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
- Greenpeace urges Greece to scrap offshore gas drilling project because of impact on whales, dolphins
- Suzanne Somers’ Cause of Death Revealed
- 'Diaries of War' traces two personal accounts — one from Ukraine, one from Russia
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- Best Buy recalls almost 1 million pressure cookers after spewed contents burn 17 people
Ranking
- Federal court filings allege official committed perjury in lawsuit tied to Louisiana grain terminal
- Farmington police release video from fatal shooting of armed man on Navajo reservation
- Bar struck by Maine mass shooting mourns victims: In a split second your world gets turn upside down
- Israel-Hamas war upends years of conventional wisdom. Leaders give few details on what comes next
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- Maryland Supreme Court posthumously admits Black man to bar, 166 years after rejecting him
- Who is Robert Card? Man wanted for questioning in Maine mass shooting
- What is Gaza’s Ministry of Health and how does it calculate the war’s death toll?
Recommendation
All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
Twitter takeover: 1 year later, X struggles with misinformation, advertising and usage decline
Africa’s fashion industry is booming, UNESCO says in new report but funding remains a key challenge
Israel strikes outskirts of Gaza City during second ground raid in as many days
The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
George Santos faces arraignment on new fraud indictment in New York
There is no clear path for women who want to be NFL coaches. Can new pipelines change that?
Judge finds former Ohio lawmaker guilty of domestic violence in incident involving his wife