Tag Archives: US

Homeowners: Do You Know Your Home’s Value?

 

Homeowners: Do You Know Your Home’s Value? | MyKCM

The latest edition of CoreLogic’s Home Price Index shows that nationally, home prices have appreciated 6.7% over the last year and 0.9% month-over-month. The release of the report included this headline,

“National Home Prices Now 50% Above March 2011 Bottom”

The real estate market has come a long way since 2011, which is great news for homeowners!

Nearly 79% of homeowners with a mortgage in the US now have significant equity in their homes (defined as over 20%), according to the latest Equity Report. The challenge is that not every homeowner knows how much their home’s value has appreciated.

Homeowners in Denver, CO lead the way with 8.7% appreciation over the last year, while owners in Washington and Utah have experienced a 3% increase in values since the start of this year!

Nationally, CoreLogic forecasts that home values will increase another 5.0% by this time next year.

Bill Banfield, VP of Capital Markets at Quicken Loans, recently explained the importance of knowing the conditions in your area,

“With home values constantly changing, and the rates of change varying across the country, this is one more way to show how important it is for homeowners to stay aware of their local housing market.”

Bottom Line

Do you know what your house is worth? Have you stayed put because you are nervous you won’t have enough equity to buy your dream home? Let’s get together to perform an equity analysis and give you the freedom to achieve your dreams.

More Boomerang Buyers Are about to Enter the Market

 

More Boomerang Buyers Are about to Enter the Market | MyKCM

We previously informed you about a study conducted by TransUnion titled, “The Bubble, the Burst and Now – What Happened to the Consumer?” The study revealed that 1.5 million homeowners who were negatively impacted by the housing crisis could re-enter the housing market between 2016-2019.

Recently, HousingWire analyzed data from the US Bankruptcy Courts and revealed that 6 million Americans will have their bankruptcies disappear off their credit reports over the next five years and that this could “possibly send a flood of more homebuyers into the housing market.

The chart below shows the total number of bankruptcies filed by year in the US over the last 10 years. The light blue bars represent over 3.3 million people who have already waited the 7 years necessary for their reports to no longer include their bankruptcies.

More Boomerang Buyers Are about to Enter the Market | MyKCM

 

How would this “send a flood of more homebuyers into the housing market”?

As the article mentioned, in 2010 the number of chapter 7 bankruptcies increased to nearly 1.14 million. Now, 7 years later, they will begin to fade from credit histories, enabling prospective buyers to become homeowners again once their credit scores improve.

As we can see from both reports, the homeownership rate has the opportunity to increase drastically over the next few years with all of these boomerang buyers returning to the market.

Bottom Line

If your family was negatively impacted by the housing bust, here is the light at the end of the tunnel! You may be able to purchase your dream home faster than you think!

Sellers: Your Home is an Oasis in an Inventory Desert

 

Sellers: Your Home is an Oasis in an Inventory Desert | MyKCM

First-time homebuyers are flocking to the real estate market by the thousands to find their dream homes in order to make their dreams of homeownership a reality. Unfortunately for many, the inventory of starter and trade-up homes in the US has struggled to keep up with demand!

According to the National Association of Realtors (NAR), the inventory of homes for sale dropped 7.1% year-over-year to a 4.3-month supply and is down for the 25th consecutive month.

Some homeowners may be hesitant to list their homes for sale because they are worried that they will also have a problem finding a home to buy and move in to. This is a legitimate concern; no one wants to sell their home quickly and not have anywhere to live.

But there is good news! If you are thinking of moving up to a luxury or premium home, there is more inventory available in these markets and you may even get a great deal on a home that has been on the market for a while.

If you are the owner of a starter home and you are looking to move into a trade-up home, or if you are just looking to relocate to a new area in a home of the same size, there is still hope!

In many markets, homeowners are building contingency plans into their contracts. This means that the homeowner builds in extra time before they close in order to find their dream home and they are upfront about the contingency with any buyers who come to see the house.

Your home is an oasis to buyers who are searching for homes in today’s market. The right buyers will sympathize and wait for you and your family to find your next home.

Bottom Line

Don’t let the fear of not finding a home to move in to stop you from moving on with your life. Let’s get together to discuss ways to set expectations with potential buyers from the start.

Rates Are Actually Much Higher This Week. Here’s Why

After spending more than a month holding fairly steady near 8-month lows, rates are moving quickly higher this week. Not only are the underlying reasons somewhat opaque but there are multiple media outlets reporting the “lowest mortgage rates of the year.” What’s really going on here?

The discrepancy between actual mortgage rate movement and certain news stories is easy to explain (as seen in a past newsletter), so let’s start there.  At issue is the fact that Freddie Mac’s weekly rate survey is a longstanding industry benchmark for mortgage rates.  It’s heavily relied-upon by analysts working in the secondary mortgage market as well as journalists who simply use it as their one source for a weekly mortgage rate update.

Because the report is released at 10am on Thursday morning, we tend to see a glut of news stories offering similar conclusions about mortgage rate movement.  This seemingly unified message only adds to the confusion.  After all, if all these big news organizations are telling us that rates are at the lowest levels of the year, it must be true, right?

WRONG!

Freddie’s data is GREAT for long-term analysis of general mortgage rate trends but it does a GREAT DISSERVICE to prospective borrowers keeping an eye on day-to-day changes.

The reason is strikingly simple: rates can move every day, but Freddie’s survey only covers the first 3 days of any given week.  Moreover, most of the responses tend to come in on Monday and Tuesday.

In other words, Freddie’s survey is best described as “Monday/Tuesday rates vs last Monday/Tuesday’s rates.” This creates obvious problems if rates are making bigger moves in the second half of any given week–especially if they moved in the opposite direction during the first half of the week.

Here’s how all of the above played out this time around.  Mortgage rates were indeed in line with the year’s lowest levels on Monday (only June 14th was any better as far as individual days are concerned).  But the next 3 days all saw rates move convincingly higher.  Freddie’s survey responses–being weighted toward the start of the week–simply didn’t capture the magnitude of the rate spike (it will be reflected in next week’s numbers unless we get a friendly bounce between now and then).

The bottom line is that rates are definitely not at 2017’s lowest levels.  In fact, in terms of day-over-day changes in actual lender rate sheets (remember, humans respond to surveys, and they might not all be cross-checking actual rate sheets before firing off their responses to Freddie), rates are as high as they’ve been since May 16th.

A major caveat is that the recent range of mortgage rates has been exceptionally narrow by historical standards.  It’s also been holding fairly close to the lowest levels in 8 months.  Still, the amount of movement over the past few days adds up to hundreds, even thousands of dollars for some borrowers’ loan quotes.  That could be quite the surprise if they’ve just heard about the “lowest rates of the year” on the evening news.

2017-6-29 nl1

What’s Moving Markets?

Now that we know WHAT mortgage rates have actually been doing, let’s talk about WHY.  If you remember the so-called “taper tantrum” in 2013 (the market reaction to the Fed signalling its intent to buy fewer bonds), then you’re halfway there.

This time around, the focus is on the European Central Bank (ECB), whose bond buying puts it in the same league as the Fed in terms of impact on financial markets.  Whereas the Fed has long since stopped expanding its balance sheet (they may even begin shrinking it later this year), the ECB continues adding more bonds to its balance sheet every month.

Given the huge impact of the taper tantrum in the US, investors are on guard for any indication of tapering in the EU.  ECB President Mario Draghi gave just such an indication in a series of comments earlier this week.  He spoke of deflation being replaced by reflation, above-trend growth, and the need to gradually adjust bond-buying parameters.

ECB Officials would subsequently try to explain that Draghi was aiming for comments that balanced positive developments with the ongoing need for substantial bond buying.  But the takeaway for market participants was that the ECB is moving closer and closer to tapering.

Why should rates in the US care about what’s going on with the European Central Bank?  To make a long story short, global bond markets (which drive interest rates) are interconnected and interdependent to a certain degree.  US rates might not respond to European rates in lock-step, but they definitely respond.  As such, it’s no surprise to see European benchmark rates surging and US rates following with a more measured version of the same move.

2017-6-29 nl2

Is this the end of low rates forever?  Not by a long-shot.  First of all, we’re only a few days into a move that took several months to play out in the US.  We can’t yet know if European rates are embarking on a similar journey.

Even if that happens, it’s good to keep in mind that rates generally move higher when central banks are actually in a bond-buying cycle.  True, that sounds terribly counterintuitive (after all, if the Fed/ECB are buying bonds, rates should be going down), but the following chart with QE time-frames in the US doesn’t lie.

2017-6-29 nl4

Don’t read too much into this chart because it could be competently argued several ways.  The point of posting it is to offer perspective.  What might seem like a surefire reason for rates to move higher could merely be the catalyst for a temporary correction in the bigger picture.  After all, most economists and analysts thought low rates were a thing of the past by the end of 2010 and 2013.  The subsequent years were the best 2 years of the recovery.
Housing-Specific News

There were several interesting developments in housing this week.  2 weeks after comments on a potential “housing emergency” due to tight inventory, The National Association of Realtors (NAR) now says the perception of a seller’s market could provide motivation for owners to list their homes, thus relieving some of the inventory pressure.

As for the month of May, there was no such relief in sight.  The NAR blamed lopsided supply and demand for the lowest Pending Home Sales levels since January.  Despite the justification, it’s worth noting that this index hasn’t been able to get back above its current range since the meltdown.

2017-6-29 nl3

Both Black Knight and Case-Shiller released their monthly home price indices.  Both set record highs at the national level, and both reports agree that the national numbers are being dragged higher by several outstanding regional markets.  Of the two, the Case-Shiller report did more to provide a counterpoint to the positivity, citing some signs of deceleration.