First American Financial Corp. released First American’s proprietary Potential Home Sales model for the month of April 2016. The model provides a gauge on whether existing-home sales are under or over their long-run potential level based on current market fundamentals. For April, the model showed that the market for existing-home sales is underperforming its potential by 4.1 percent or an estimated 232,000 seasonally adjusted, annualized rate (SAAR) of sales, an improvement over last month’s revised performance gap of -7.6 percent or 418,000 (SAAR) sales.
The market potential for existing-home sales grew by 2.2 percent compared with March, an increase of 122,000 (SAAR) sales, and grew by 1.5 percent from a year ago. This month, the seasonally adjusted, annualized rate of potential existing-home sales is 5.63 million. This represents an 86.5 percent increase from the market potential low point reached in December 2008, but is down 751,000 (SAAR), or 11.8 percent, from the pre-recession peak of market potential, which occurred in July 2005.
Existing-home sales rebounded in March, with a reported level of 5.33 million (SAAR), after dropping sharply in February to 5.07 million (SAAR), according to the National Association of Realtors (NAR).
First American Chief Economist Mark Fleming said the 5.1 percent month-over-month increase and 1.5 percent annual increase in home sales were driven mainly by gains in the Northeast and Midwest. The increases further illustrate how volatile the housing market has been over the past few quarters, as a variety of competing economic forces has pulled the market in different directions. Although the market has moved closer to its potential, low inventories of homes for sale and tighter credit availability continue to constrain market activity, even with improving labor, wage and mortgage rate conditions, Fleming said.
“The number of available homes for sale remains at depressed levels, although there was some slight relief in March as the housing inventory increased to a 4.5 month supply of homes for sale, up from a 4.4 month supply in February. Fannie Mae’s April Home Purchase Sentiment Index suggests that increasing inventories will continue into the heart of the spring buying season, with an encouraging 3.5 point increase between March and April driven solely by a large increase in seller sentiment,” Fleming said. “The net percentage of those who said now was a good time to sell jumped from -1 percent to an all-time survey high of 15 percent. This is in contrast to the net percentage of those who believe that now is a good time to buy, which fell to an all-time survey low of 30 percent, dropping 3 percentage points from March to April and 5 percentage points from April 2015.
“Tightening credit availability is potentially contributing to the decrease in homebuyer sentiment …,” Fleming said. “The timing of the decrease suggests that lenders began implementing tighter lending standards in response to the implementation of the Know-Before-You-Owe rule, particularly for loan products that the private secondary market is rejecting more frequently for Know-Before-You-Owe compliance issues. Counteracting this trend is a loosening of lending standards targeted at first-time homebuyers, such as the increasingly popular GSE low-down-payment program.”
Low inventories, tight credit conditions and rising prices are keeping the market from achieving its potential, but the market is benefitting from positive job growth, increasing wages and persistently low mortgage rates, the report said.
“Given that it is looking less and less likely that a Fed rate hike will come in June, homebuyers should benefit from low rates and increased homebuying power throughout the spring homebuying season,” he said.