Odeta Kushi Profile picture
Mar 25 8 tweets 3 min read
U.S. pending-home sales down -4.1% MoM, were expected to increase +1%. Pending home sales are forward-looking indicator of home sales based on contract signings. This is the fourth straight month of declines. What's holding back sales? Image
Lack of inventory and growing affordability challenges. Inventory turnover, the supply of homes for sale nationwide as a percentage of occupied residential inventory was at a historic low in February. You can't buy what's not for sale, even if you can afford it. Image
If we hold income constant at its Feb 2021 level, the 95 basis point increase in rates from Feb. 2021-Feb.2022 resulted in a ~$53,000 decline in house-buying power. Some buyers are being priced out of a housing market experiencing double-digit house price growth & rising rates.
The market remains tilted in favor of sellers as we enter the busiest time of the year for the housing market. Not enough supply relative to demand will keep house price growth positive, but not at the record-breaking pace we saw in 2021.
My other concern when it comes to rising rates is the impact to inventory. The majority of inventory is existing-home inventory & existing homeowners are staying put. Avg tenure length in the US is over 10 years & rising rates will further discourage existing owners from moving.
Context is key. We're seeing some softening in the market, as expected with limited inventory, double-digit house price growth & rising rates. But, while purchase demand is below 2020 &2021 levels, it's still above 2019 levels, which was our strongest year in a decade. Image
If you're curious about tenure length by market (CBSA), here's the data for January 2022. Highest tenure length in major CA markets- nearly 16 years in San Jose! Image
Here's what I mean when I say that existing-home inventory makes up the majority of total inventory. Historically nearly 90%, but recently more like 70%. Image

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More from @odetakushi

Dec 23, 2021
Sales of new single‐family houses in Nov 2021 were at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 744,000, this is 12.4% above the revised (down) Oct. rate of 662,000. The median sales price of new houses sold in Nov. was $416,900, 18.8% higher than one year ago and a new record high.
By stage of construction, the share of completed homes sold was 22%, down from 25% one year ago. Prior to the pandemic, completed homes made up the largest share of new homes sold. Today, it is homes under construction.
By stage of construction, the share of completed homes/ready to occupy inventory in November was 9.7%, down from 14.5% one year ago. While the share of new home inventory that is not started increased from 22% to 27%.
Read 5 tweets
Dec 22, 2021
Existing-home sales rose 1.9% M/M in November. From one year ago, the inventory of unsold homes decreased 13.3% to 1.11 million (2.1-month supply at current sales pace). Properties remained on the market for 18 days & 83% of homes sold were on the market for less than a month. Image
A higher velocity of sales (lower days on markets) helps to explain a housing market characterized by both higher sales & lower inventory levels. Purchase apps have been pointing to a strong end to the year for home sales as low rates & demographics continue to boost demand. Image
Speaking of purchase applications- they are on track to end the year at the highest level since 2008 (excluding 2020). In the week ending 12/17, the avg purchase loan increased to $416,200 - the second highest amount ever (the highest was in February 2021 at $418,000). Image
Read 5 tweets
Dec 16, 2021
Nov housing starts report is an indication of strength for the housing market. The # of permits issued, which can signal how much construction is in the pipeline, increased by 3.6%, homebuilding rose as total housing starts increased 11.8% M/M (SF up 11.3%).
This month saw an increase of 4% in the number of completed homes, which is additional new net supply added to the housing stock. The growth in completions means more homes on the market in the short-term, offering some immediate relief in alleviating housing supply shortages.
Builders are ending the year feeling confident, with the homebuilder sentiment index increasing for the 4th straight month in December – up one point to 84. Of the index’s three components, both current sales conditions & the traffic of prospective buyers rose 1 point. Image
Read 8 tweets
Jun 11, 2021
U.S. households own nearly $34 trillion in owner-occupied real estate, $11 trillion in debt, and the remaining nearly $23 trillion in equity. The national "LTV" is at its lowest level in more than three decades. (1/6)
Mortgage debt as % of disposable income is at a near historic low. Many homeowners have locked into sub-4% rates. In fact as of Q1, the average interest rate on outstanding mortgage debt was appx. 3.5%. (2/6)
Lending standards today are strict & those who are qualifying for mortgages have great credit. The median credit score for approved borrowers was 788 during the Q1 of 2021, up from 773 one year ago. (3/6)
Read 6 tweets
Aug 14, 2019
Agreed. Yield curve inversion and recession- let’s not confuse correlation with causation. It’s more of a spurious correlation, i.e. the real causal relationship is an unseen factor. So, what’s not spuriously correlated but actually related to the yield curve? (1/4)
1.) Our domestic economy is more interconnected than ever. When uncertainty increases somewhere else, we are the recipient of demand for safe harbor for assets (2/4)
2.) Federal Reserve bought lots of long-term treasury bonds and MBS- this domestic demand has worked to drive down yields. (3/4)
Read 4 tweets

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