Published: Dec 30, 2021 Source article by: mbshighway
The Fed’s favorite measure of inflation, Personal Consumption Expenditures, showed that headline inflation rose 0.6% in November, which was hotter than anticipated.
This caused the year over year reading to increase from 5.1% to 5.7%, which is the hottest reading in almost 40 years!
Core PCE, which strips out volatile food and energy prices and is the Fed’s real focus, was up 0.5%, which was also above the consensus. The year over year reading increased from 4.2% to 4.7%.
Remember, inflation is the arch enemy of fixed investments like Mortgage Bonds because it erodes the buying power of a Bond’s fixed rate of return. If inflation is rising, investors demand a rate of return to combat the faster pace of erosion due to inflation, causing interest rates to rise. This is why keeping an eye on inflation remains critical.
Existing Home Sales Rise for Third Consecutive Month
However, the low inventory of homes around the country remains a challenge for many buyers, as there were only 1.1 million homes for sale at the end of November. This is down nearly 10% from October and 13.3% year over year. Inventory is nearing the record low levels of just above 1 million that were seen earlier this year. The continued strong demand for homes and near record low inventory remains supportive of home prices.
The median home price was reported at $353,900, which is up almost 14% year over year. Remember that the median home price is not the same as appreciation. It simply means half the homes sold were above that price and half were below it.
First-time homebuyers accounted for 26% of sales, which is down from 29% in October. This decline is concerning and it’s important to monitor if this is related to seasonal factors or part of a bigger theme. First-time homebuyers, after all, are the engine of the housing market.
Cash buyers remained stable at 24%, while investors purchased 15% of homes, which is down from 17%. Foreclosures and short sales accounted for less than 1% of all transactions.
The Real Scoop on New Home Sales
New Home Sales, which measure signed contracts on new homes, were up 12.4% from October to November at a 744,000 annualized pace. However, this doesn’t tell the whole story. Sales for October were revised lower from 745,000 to 662,000, so when factoring this in, New Home Sales are really unchanged from October’s original reporting.
Year over year sales were down 14%, but the annual comparisons to November 2020 are tough because of the abnormalities in the market due to the pandemic.
The median home price came in at $416,900, which is up from $407,700 in October, and up 19% from last year. Again, the median home price is not the same as appreciation. It simply means half the homes sold were above that price and half were below it. A greater amount of higher-priced homes are being built because there is no margin in lower-priced homes, so naturally the median price is being driven higher.
Rents Continue to Rise
Despite the challenges homebuyers are facing due to high demand, low inventory and an uptick in rates, there are still tremendous benefits in homeownership. Rents are rising aggressively, and renewals can continue to rise each year.
For instance, Realtor.com also reported data showing that rents were up almost 20% year over year in November. The national median rent reached $1,771, up almost $300 per month from last year. If we were to reverse engineer this at a 3.25% interest rate, it would equate to $70,000 in additional buying power for housing.
Remember that demographically, people are entering their 30’s in record-high numbers at almost 5 million per year, which should continue to provide robust demand for purchases and rentals.
Mortgage Bonds remain in their downtrend, but support at 101.922 held at the end of last week. The 10-year broke above a duel ceiling comprised of the 200-day and 25-day Moving Averages. The next level of resistance is up at the 50-day Moving Average.
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