Summary
- Home prices slip & mortgage rates decline.
- Median income edges up.
- Affordability increases throughout the country.
The National Association of Realtors’ Fixed Rate Mortgage Housing Affordability Index (HAI) increased 1.8% (1.2% y/y) in July to 95.0 after falling 0.2% to 93.3 in June. The level of home affordability has plunged 46.9% from a peak of 179.0 in April 2020.
The rise in affordability reflected a 1.0% decline (+4.2% y/y) in the median price of an existing single-family home to $428,500. This followed five straight monthly increases to a record $432,900 in June. The price weakening accompanied a drop in the average mortgage rate to 6.93% from 7.00% in June. It remained up sharply from the December 2020 low of 2.73%. The declines lowered the principal & interest payment by 1.7% (+4.3% y/y) to $2,265. That was increased from the most recent low of $984 in February 2020. Monthly mortgage payments averaged 26.3% of income during July versus 26.8% in June. It remained up from a recent low of 14.0% in April 2020.
The decline in housing costs was accompanied by improvement in median family income which increased 0.1% in July (5.5% y/y) to a record $103,278 after rising 0.8% in June.
Housing affordability increased across the country in July. The affordability index rose 4.3% (-3.8% y/y) in the Northeast to 87.9. The index increased 2.5% (1.0% y/y) to 122.3 in the Midwest and it remained the most affordable region of the country to live. In the South, the index rose 1.0% (3.5% y/y) to 98.8 and in the West, where homes are the least affordable, the index rose 0.7% (2.7% y/y) to 69.1.
The Housing Affordability Index (HAI) equals 100 when a median-income borrower qualifies for an 80% mortgage on a median-priced existing single-family home. The HAI had exceeded 100 in each month since July 1990 and reached its all-time high of 213.3 in January 2013; since then, it fell below 100 for the first time in June 2022 (98.8).
Data on Housing Affordability can be found in Haver’s REALTOR database. Median home sales prices are also available in USECON. Higher frequency interest rate data are found in SURVEYS, WEEKLY, and DAILY.
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