Home sales numbers released Tuesday offered more sobering news: The number of existing homes sold continued their fall to levels last seen during the fallout of the Great Recession. At the same time, prices remain stubbornly high amid the highest mortgage rates in 23 years.
The National Association of Realtors reported that existing-home sales in October dropped below economists projections to 3.79 million. The median price last month ticked up to $391,800 – a 3.4% increase from 2022 but a 6.3% decline from September.
Since 2000, annualized home sales figures averaged about 5.3 million each month. Only three other months – all following the 2007-08 financial crisis – registered lower sales than October, including July 2010 which set the low watermark of 3.45 million.
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The number of homes sold has been tumbling since 2022 when the Fed announced its plans to raise interest rates in an effort to tame 40-year high inflation. Mortgage rates have more than doubled since and, in turn, increased monthly payments for new homeowners.
30-year mortgage rates have fallen to 7.44%. Rates, which might have peaked at the end of the month, appeared to deterred some buyers in October, according to the NAR report. All-cash sales rose from 26% last year to 29% in October, while the percentage of first-time buyers, the next biggest group, was unchanged.
Fed Chairman Jerome Powell and other Fed presidents continue to say that we shouldn’t expect a reduction in interest rates any time soon. That said, nearly all investors who bet on the movements of interest rates expect the Fed will hold interest rates steady following its next meetings in December and January, according to the CME FedWatch Tool.
Source: usatoday.com