July sees highest level of U.S. consumers expressing ‘unfavorable time to purchase’ a house in 13 years

Aug ⁢7 ⁢(Reuters) ⁤- The share⁤ of U.S. consumers who believe ⁤it is a ⁢bad time to ‌buy a home reached the highest ‍level in at‌ least 13 years in July, according⁢ to a survey ⁤released ‌on Monday, as the⁢ supply of available properties ‌remains scarce and home prices appear to have ⁤stopped cooling.

The portion of U.S. ‌consumers saying now⁢ is a “bad time to buy” a ⁤new home increased⁢ by 4 percentage points in ‍July to 82%, according to a​ report released⁣ Monday by Fannie Mae, the highest level since‌ the mortgage finance ​giant began conducting the survey in⁢ 2010.

Consumers’ outlook also⁢ appears to⁣ have taken a hit, with a net 17% of respondents expecting price increases in the next 12 months, the highest percentage in over a year.

The⁣ grim perception of the housing market comes as home costs appear to have hit ‍a ⁣floor after downward price pressure from the Federal Reserve’s 525 basis points worth of interest rate hikes ⁢since March⁢ 2022.

Persistently high home-buying costs ‌are ⁢in large part due⁣ to limited housing stock, which has remained at historically ‌low levels. Many homeowners ⁣are now unwilling to buy a ‍new home that would require‍ more expensive financing compared to ⁢mortgage costs locked in before the Fed started raising rates.

Willingness to sell was unchanged in July, according to the survey, with 64% of respondents indicating that now was ‍a good time to sell‍ – unchanged⁣ from the month prior.

Not all was pessimistic ⁣in the report, however,⁣ as confidence in the labor market and expected decreases in future ‍mortgage rates pushed the⁢ overall Home Purchase Sentiment Index to ‍66.8, up 4​ points year over year and 0.8 points from‍ June.

“While⁤ consumers are reporting confidence in ⁣the components related to their personal financial situations, it’s unlikely we’ll see ⁤housing sentiment catch⁤ up to‍ other⁢ broader economic confidence measures until there is meaningful improvement‌ to home purchase affordability,” said Doug Duncan, Fannie Mae senior vice president and chief economist.

Reporting by Safiyah Riddle; Editing ⁢by Conor Humphries

Our Standards: ⁢The Thomson Reuters Trust​ Principles.

Link ​from www.reuters.com

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