Mortgage rates — both their high levels and wild swings — are making life difficult for both homebuyers and sellers, according to Zillow’s latest market report.
Relatively high rates have brought new listings down to record lows, leaving buyers with limited options. Any dips in mortgage rates are stimulating demand and stiffening competition, but they have been short-lived.
“We know there are a lot of motivated buyers looking for homes. When we see mortgage rates fall, sales pick up,” Skylar Olsen, Zillow chief economist, said in a release. “But buyers are disappointed in their options. Homeowners aren’t giving up their current house and low monthly payments to join a tight, expensive market. Meanwhile, volatility in the economy makes planning extremely difficult.”
The flow of new listings in February is at a record low for this time of year, nearly a third lower than before the pandemic and 22 percent lower than last year, according to Zillow.
Mortgage rates are likely driving the decline — those who bought or refinanced in 2020 or 2021, when rates were well below 3.5 percent, are unwilling to trade in their current mortgage for a new one with double the interest, Olsen said. The largest annual declines in new listings are in West Coast markets: San Jose, Calif. (-47 percent), Portland, Ore. (-46 percent), Seattle (-45 percent) and Sacramento, Calif. (-44 percent).
The trickle of new listings is contributing to extremely low levels of total inventory, now 17 percent higher than February 2022, but still about 43 percent below pre-pandemic norms. Instead of inventory growing through the first two months of the year, like it did in 2018 and 2019, the number of choices shrank, Zillow stated.
“This market is not as frenzied as it was during the last two years, but hom buyers might start to feel some déjà vu at the dearth of options,” Jeff Tucker, Zillow senior economist, said. “Homesellers seem to be sitting out the early spring selling season in surprising numbers.”
Mortgage rates have been incredibly volatile over the past six months, and buyers are responding to the chance to lock in a cheaper monthly payment when the opportunity arises. Sales activity is picking up, just not accelerating like it usually does at this time of year. After being reinvigorated by lower rates in late January, sales slowed over the course of February as rates hiked back up. All in all, February saw 19 percent fewer newly pending sales than last year and 5 percent fewer sales than the most recent pre-pandemic reading in 2020.
Ultralow inventory means when attractive, well-priced houses do come on the market, they are readily finding buyers. Homes that went under contract in February did so after a median span of 17 days. That’s more time than in 2022 and 2021, when time on market was seven and nine days, respectively, but significantly less than before the pandemic, Zillow data shows.
Home values flatlined from January to February, leaving the typical home value at $328,604, or 4 percent below the peak value set in July 2022, according to the Zillow Home Value Index. Home values are 4.4 percent higher than one year earlier — a rapidly decelerating pace of annual growth, down from the nearly record-high 18.8 percent year-over-year growth measured last April. The overall lack of inventory, along with the resurgence of buyers when costs fall, should prevent significant price declines.
Rates are likely to remain volatile through the spring selling season. Working with a mortgage professional early in the process can help buyers demystify what’s affordable, prepare their credit and get pre-approved to strengthen their offer.