Posts from May 2023

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Uncategorized | 818 Posts
May
22

Higher mortgage rates and low housing inventory restrain California home sales in April, C.A.R. reports

Statewide median home price ratchets above $800,000 for first time in six months.

  • Existing, single-family home sales totaled 267,880 in April on a seasonally adjusted annualized rate, down 4.7 percent from March and down 36.1 percent from April 2022.

  • April's statewide median home price was $815,340, up 3.0 percent from March and down 7.8 percent from April 2022.

  • Year-to-date statewide home sales were down 37.4 percent in April.

  • C.A.R. 2023 Housing market forecast revised to 279,900 units sold and a statewide median price of $776,600.

LOS ANGELES (May 18) – A surge in mortgage interest rates and a shortage of homes for sale suppressed California home sales in April, while the statewide median home price climbed above the $800,000 level for the first time in six months, the CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (C.A.R.) said today. 

Infographic: https://www.car.org/Global/Infographics/2023-04-Sales-and-Price

Closed escrow sales of existing, single-family detached homes in California totaled a seasonally adjusted annualized rate of 267,880 in April, according to information collected by C.A.R. from more than 90 local REALTOR® associations and MLSs statewide. The statewide annualized sales figure represents what would be the total number of homes sold during 2023 if sales maintained the April pace throughout the year. It is adjusted to account for seasonal factors that typically influence home sales.

April's sales pace was down 4.7 percent on a monthly basis from 281,050 in March and down 36.1 percent from a year ago, when a revised 418,970 homes were sold on an annualized basis. Sales of existing single-family homes in California remained below the 300,000-unit pace for the seventh consecutive month.

"While home sales declined in April, the market is getting more competitive as we're seeing time on the market before selling down to 20 days in April from 33 days in January and the share of homes sold above asking price double from one in five at the beginning of the year to more than two in five in April," said C.A.R. President Jennifer Branchini, a Bay Area REALTOR®. "This increase in market competition continued to provide support to the statewide median home price in April, which climbed above $800,000 for the first time in six months."

California's median home price surpassed $800,000 in April for the first time since October 2022, increasing 3.0 percent from March's $791,490 to $815,340. Despite the price improvement since early this year, April's median price was lower on a year-over-year basis for the sixth consecutive month, declining 7.8 percent from the revised $884,680 recorded last April. The sizable drop in median price from last year was due partly to the strong price surge in early 2022 when homebuyers rushed into the market to take advantage of low rates before the Fed began aggressively raising rates.

"Home sales remained soft as the lock-in effect continued to tighten housing supply and keep would-be sellers from listing their homes for sale, which contributed to a 30 percent year-over-year drop in new statewide active listings ― the largest drop since May 2020 when the pandemic shutdown took place," said C.A.R. Senior Vice President and Chief Economist Jordan Levine. "A surge in borrowing costs as mortgage rates surpassed 7% in late February and early March also contributed to the market weakness, as many transactions that opened in those two months were closed in April."

As such, C.A.R. has revised its 2023 Housing Market Forecast and projects existing single-family home sales to reach 279,900 units in 2023, a decline of 18.2 percent from the 342,000 units sold in 2022. While home prices in general are expected to improve in the second half of the year, the California median home price is projected to decrease 5.6 percent to $776,600 in 2023, down from the annual median price of $822,300 recorded in 2022. The updated projection on the statewide median price is an increase from the estimate of $758,600 forecast last October. C.A.R. also projects the 30-year fixed mortgage interest rate to average 6.3 percent for the year.

Other key points from C.A.R.'s April 2023 resale housing report include:

  • At the regional level, sales declines accelerated in all regions, with the Central Coast dropping the most at -42.8 percent. The Far North (41.8 percent) followed closely behind as four of the six counties in the region recorded a drop of more than 40 percent. Sales in the San Francisco Bay Area (-38.5 percent), Southern California (-37.4 percent) and the Central Valley (-36.7 percent) all declined at a faster pace than the prior month, with each region falling by more than a third on a year-over-year basis.

     

  • All 51 counties tracked by C.A.R. registered a sales decline from the previous year, with sales in 44 counties dropping more than 30 percent and sales in five counties sliding more than 50 percent from a year ago. Mariposa (-80.8 percent) had the largest sales drop, followed by Calaveras (-59.0 percent) and Santa Cruz (-58.4 percent). Lassen (-4.8 percent) was the only county with less than 10 percent annual sales decrease. Closed sales should improve in many markets the upcoming month, however, as 39 counties experienced a monthly increase in pending sales.

     

  • At the regional level, median home prices continued to drop from a year ago in all major regions, but only one region posted a double-digit decline compared to three regions in the prior month. The San Francisco Bay Area (-16.7 percent) remained the region with the biggest sales drop, as six out of nine counties in the Bay Area region fell more than 10 percent year-over-year. The sharp decline is partly attributed to the base effect, as prices surged a year ago when many homebuyers tried to close transactions before rates climbed further. Central Valley (-8.0 percent) and Southern California (-6.2 percent) recorded the second and third largest drop in April, respectively, followed by the Far North (-3.8 percent) and Central Coast (-2.9 percent).
  • More than three-quarters of all counties experienced year-over-year price declines in April, with 13 counties falling more than 10 percent. Mono (-50.1 percent) had the biggest drop of all counties, followed by San Francisco (-22.8 percent), Alameda (-18.0 percent) and San Mateo (-18 percent). On a positive note, 12 counties registered an increase in their median price from last April, a jump from six counties in March. The price increases were either mild or moderate for most counties, with only one county's median price surging by double-digits. Glenn (24.1 percent) had the biggest gain in price of all counties again in April, followed by Amador (6.7 percent) and Monterey (5.4 percent).

     

  • Housing inventory in California bounced back after dipping month-over-month for two straight months. The statewide Unsold Inventory Index (UII) in April 2023 also increased from last year, jumping 38.9 percent on a year-over-year basis. The surge in the UII continued primarily due to low housing demand as existing home sales remained below the 300,000 benchmark. All price ranges recorded an increase in the UII of more than 20 percent in from a year ago, with the $1 million and higher price sector gaining the most (64.7 percent), followed by the $500,000-$749,000 price range (33.3 percent), the sub-$500,000 (26.3 percent) and the $750,000-$999,000 sector (21.1 percent).
  • The median number of days it took to sell a California single-family home was 20 days in April and 11 days in April 2022.
  • C.A.R.'s statewide sales-price-to-list-price ratio* was 100 percent in April 2023 and 104.2 percent in April 2022.
  • The statewide average price per square foot** for an existing single-family home was $395, down from $433 in April a year ago.
  • The 30-year, fixed-mortgage interest rate averaged 6.34 percent in April, up from 4.98 percent in April 2022, according to Freddie Mac.

Note:  The County MLS median price and sales data in the tables are generated from a survey of more than 90 associations of REALTORS® throughout the state and represent statistics of existing single-family detached homes only. County sales data is not adjusted to account for seasonal factors that can influence home sales. Movements in sales prices should not be interpreted as changes in the cost of a standard home. The median price is where half sold for more and half sold for less; medians are more typical than average prices, which are skewed by a relatively small share of transactions at either the lower end or the upper end. Median prices can be influenced by changes in cost, as well as changes in the characteristics and the size of homes sold. The change in median prices should not be construed as actual price changes in specific homes.

*Sales-to-list-price ratio is an indicator that reflects the negotiation power of home buyers and home sellers under current market conditions. The ratio is calculated by dividing the final sales price of a property by its original list price and is expressed as a percentage. A sales-to-list ratio with 100 percent or above suggests that the property sold for more than the list price, and a ratio below 100 percent indicates that the price sold below the asking price.

**Price per square foot is a measure commonly used by real estate agents and brokers to determine how much a square foot of space a buyer will pay for a property. It is calculated as the sale price of the home divided by the number of finished square feet. C.A.R. currently tracks price-per-square foot statistics for 50 counties.

Leading the way…® in California real estate for more than 110 years, the CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (www.car.org) is one of the largest state trade organizations in the United States with more than 200,000 members dedicated to the advancement of professionalism in real estate. C.A.R. is headquartered in Los Angeles.

# # #

 

April 2023 County Sales and Price Activity
(Regional and condo sales data not seasonally adjusted)

April 2023

Median Sold Price of Existing Single-Family Homes

Sales

State/Region/County

April

2023

March

2023

 

April

2022

 

Price MTM% Chg

Price YTY% Chg

Sales MTM% Chg

Sales YTY% Chg

Calif. Single-family home

$815,340

$791,490

 

$884,680

r

3.0%

-7.8%

-4.7%

-36.1%

Calif. Condo/Townhome

$635,000

$640,000

 

$699,000

r

-0.8%

-9.2%

-6.6%

-38.6%

Los Angeles Metro Area

$740,000

$735,000

 

$800,000

 

0.7%

-7.5%

-7.7%

-37.5%

Central Coast

$1,020,000

$922,500

 

$1,050,000

 

10.6%

-2.9%

-12.0%

-42.8%

Central Valley

$460,000

$453,550

 

$500,000

 

1.4%

-8.0%

-10.9%

-36.7%

Far North

$385,000

$355,000

 

$400,000

 

8.5%

-3.8%

-6.4%

-41.8%

Inland Empire

$565,000

$555,000

 

$580,000

 

1.8%

-2.6%

-6.6%

-36.3%

San Francisco Bay Area

$1,250,000

$1,228,000

 

$1,500,000

r

1.8%

-16.7%

0.5%

-38.5%

Southern California

$785,000

$770,000

 

$837,000

r

1.9%

-6.2%

-7.8%

-37.4%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

San Francisco Bay Area

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Alameda

$1,230,000

$1,225,000

 

$1,500,000

 

0.4%

-18.0%

2.6%

-37.3%

Contra Costa

$900,000

$852,500

 

$1,050,000

 

5.6%

-14.3%

6.0%

-35.0%

Marin

$1,790,000

$1,600,000

 

$2,125,000

r

11.9%

-15.8%

40.0%

-30.3%

Napa

$815,000

$890,000

 

$975,000

r

-8.4%

-16.4%

-15.3%

-51.2%

San Francisco

$1,587,500

$1,700,000

 

$2,057,500

 

-6.6%

-22.8%

13.9%

-32.3%

San Mateo

$1,970,000

$1,860,000

 

$2,401,000

 

5.9%

-18.0%

-11.8%

-49.0%

Santa Clara

$1,800,000

$1,700,000

 

$1,970,000

 

5.9%

-8.6%

-10.9%

-44.8%

Solano

$580,000

$585,000

 

$640,000

 

-0.9%

-9.4%

3.5%

-26.7%

Sonoma

$840,000

$829,000

 

$870,000

r

1.3%

-3.4%

-0.8%

-39.8%

Southern California

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Los Angeles

$738,520

$718,370

 

$801,680

 

2.8%

-7.9%

-8.0%

-37.6%

Orange

$1,225,000

$1,250,000

 

$1,325,000

 

-2.0%

-7.5%

-10.1%

-39.7%

Riverside

$615,000

$612,000

 

$630,000

 

0.5%

-2.4%

-6.6%

-35.5%

San Bernardino

$450,000

$475,000

 

$495,000

 

-5.3%

-9.1%

-6.8%

-37.9%

San Diego

$930,000

$915,000

 

$975,000

 

1.6%

-4.6%

-8.2%

-36.9%

Ventura

$885,500

$849,000

 

$955,000

 

4.3%

-7.3%

-4.7%

-37.4%

Central Coast

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Monterey

$952,500

$900,000

 

$903,500

 

5.8%

5.4%

-19.0%

-27.9%

San Luis Obispo

$925,000

$895,000

 

$890,000

 

3.4%

3.9%

-10.1%

-45.2%

Santa Barbara

$1,080,500

$769,000

 

$1,200,000

 

40.5%

-10.0%

0.0%

-38.8%

Santa Cruz

$1,349,500

$1,205,000

 

$1,410,000

 

12.0%

-4.3%

-21.3%

-58.4%

Central Valley

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fresno

$413,000

$409,500

 

$425,000

 

0.9%

-2.8%

-9.0%

-32.3%

Glenn

$349,000

$370,000

 

$281,260

 

-5.7%

24.1%

37.5%

-21.4%

Kern

$375,000

$365,000

 

$385,000

 

2.7%

-2.6%

-17.1%

-38.8%

Kings

$361,000

$355,000

 

$360,000

 

1.7%

0.3%

0.0%

-16.3%

Madera

$420,000

$417,000

 

$418,000

 

0.7%

0.5%

2.8%

-36.7%

Merced

$365,120

$400,000

 

$395,000

 

-8.7%

-7.6%

-1.4%

-41.5%

Placer

$650,000

$641,000

 

$717,000

 

1.4%

-9.3%

-16.2%

-38.5%

Sacramento

$515,000

$500,000

 

$570,000

 

3.0%

-9.6%

-6.6%

-40.4%

San Benito

$768,000

$750,000

 

$860,000

 

2.4%

-10.7%

-12.9%

-43.8%

San Joaquin

$520,000

$544,550

 

$555,000

 

-4.5%

-6.3%

-19.4%

-29.7%

Stanislaus

$455,000

$449,000

 

$485,000

 

1.3%

-6.2%

-6.2%

-36.5%

Tulare

$357,000

$344,000

 

$370,000

 

3.8%

-3.5%

-15.9%

-39.1%

Far North

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Butte

$469,000

$421,650

 

$467,250

 

11.2%

0.4%

7.7%

-46.2%

Lassen

$252,950

$249,000

 

$245,000

 

1.6%

3.2%

33.3%

-4.8%

Plumas

$319,250

$310,000

 

$350,000

 

3.0%

-8.8%

220.0%

-44.8%

Shasta

$390,000

$365,000

 

$389,000

 

6.8%

0.3%

-19.6%

-41.3%

Siskiyou

$289,000

$240,000

 

$322,250

 

20.4%

-10.3%

14.8%

-38.0%

Tehama

$315,000

$283,180

 

$350,000

 

11.2%

-10.0%

-34.4%

-50.0%

Other Calif. Counties

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Amador

$475,000

$414,940

 

$445,000

 

14.5%

6.7%

-34.0%

-45.0%

Calaveras

$495,000

$438,000

 

$504,500

 

13.0%

-1.9%

-8.9%

-59.0%

Del Norte

$315,000

$400,000

 

$357,500

 

-21.3%

-11.9%

-13.3%

-35.0%

El Dorado

$721,600

$625,000

 

$711,000

 

15.5%

1.5%

13.1%

-46.9%

Humboldt

$439,000

$450,000

 

$464,300

 

-2.4%

-5.4%

-14.5%

-40.8%

Lake

$312,000

$351,250

 

$321,000

 

-11.2%

-2.8%

-21.2%

-42.2%

Mariposa

$425,000

$399,500

 

$423,000

 

6.4%

0.5%

-68.8%

-80.8%

Mendocino

$485,000

$492,500

 

$545,000

 

-1.5%

-11.0%

-24.2%

-46.8%

Mono

$1,177,750

$750,000

 

$2,362,500

 

57.0%

-50.1%

-20.0%

-33.3%

Nevada

$550,000

$539,500

 

$617,000

 

1.9%

-10.9%

-17.1%

-52.1%

Sutter

$400,000

$385,000

 

$444,000

 

3.9%

-9.9%

-13.7%

-40.5%

Tuolumne

$419,050

$389,500

 

$437,500

 

7.6%

-4.2%

-19.4%

-47.3%

Yolo

$610,000

$618,030

 

$633,000

 

-1.3%

-3.6%

-2.0%

-17.1%

Yuba

$447,450

$425,000

 

$430,000

 

5.3%

4.1%

-24.1%

-37.7%

r = revised

  

April 2023 County Unsold Inventory and Days on Market
(Regional and condo sales data not seasonally adjusted)

April 2023

Unsold Inventory Index

Median Time on Market

State/Region/County

April

2023

March

2023

 

April

2022

 

April

2023

March

2023

 

April

2022

 

Calif. Single-family home

2.5

2.2

 

1.8

 

20.0

24.0

r

11.0

r

Calif. Condo/Townhome

2.3

2.0

 

1.6

 

19.0

22.0

r

10.0

r

Los Angeles Metro Area

2.6

2.3

 

1.9

 

25.0

29.0

r

13.0

r

Central Coast

3.1

2.3

 

1.9

 

17.0

19.0

r

9.0

r

Central Valley

2.4

2.0

 

1.7

 

19.0

23.0

r

8.0

r

Far North

4.4

3.6

 

3.0

 

30.0

29.0

 

15.0

r

Inland Empire

2.8

2.7

 

1.9

 

32.0

38.0

r

15.0

r

San Francisco Bay Area

1.9

1.6

 

1.4

r

14.0

15.0

r

9.0

r

Southern California

2.5

2.2

 

1.8

 

22.0

26.0

r

12.0

r

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

San Francisco Bay Area

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Alameda

1.3

1.1

 

1.5

 

11.0

12.0

r

8.0

 

Contra Costa

1.4

1.2

 

1.5

 

10.0

12.0

r

8.0

 

Marin

2.1

2.3

 

1.1

r

37.0

38.0

r

24.0

r

Napa

4.4

3.3

 

2.0

r

43.0

52.5

r

36.0

r

San Francisco

2.4

2.4

 

1.5

 

31.0

38.0

r

22.0

r

San Mateo

2.6

1.8

 

1.5

 

11.0

11.0

 

8.0

 

Santa Clara

1.9

1.4

 

1.4

 

8.0

9.0

 

7.0

 

Solano

1.9

1.7

 

1.0

r

34.0

45.0

r

23.5

r

Sonoma

2.7

2.2

 

1.7

r

52.0

51.0

r

36.0

r

Southern California

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Los Angeles

2.6

2.2

 

1.9

 

22.0

26.0

r

13.0

r

Orange

2.3

2.0

 

1.7

 

19.0

24.0

r

12.0

r

Riverside

2.7

2.6

 

1.7

 

32.0

38.0

r

16.0

r

San Bernardino

3.2

3.0

 

2.3

r

30.0

37.0

r

12.0

r

San Diego

1.9

1.7

 

1.6

 

12.0

15.0

r

8.0

r

Ventura

2.2

2.0

 

1.8

 

28.0

31.0

r

20.0

r

Central Coast

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Monterey

3.0

2.4

 

2.5

 

18.0

16.0

 

9.0

 

San Luis Obispo

3.2

2.6

 

1.8

 

22.0

27.0

r

11.0

r

Santa Barbara

2.5

1.8

 

1.7

 

15.0

14.0

 

9.0

 

Santa Cruz

3.9

2.3

 

1.6

 

15.0

13.0

 

8.0

 

Central Valley

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fresno

2.6

2.4

 

1.9

 

19.0

21.0

r

7.0

r

Glenn

3.5

5.3

 

3.6

 

32.0

46.0

r

17.0

r

Kern

2.4

2.0

 

1.9

 

15.0

21.0

 

7.0

 

Kings

2.1

2.3

 

1.8

 

14.0

18.0

 

7.0

 

Madera

4.2

4.3

 

2.3

 

35.0

21.0

 

14.0

r

Merced

2.7

2.7

 

1.9

 

15.5

22.0

r

13.0

r

Placer

2.7

2.0

 

1.8

 

23.0

30.0

r

10.0

r

Sacramento

1.9

1.5

 

1.4

 

18.0

23.0

r

9.0

r

San Benito

3.7

3.0

 

2.5

 

26.0

25.0

 

8.0

 

San Joaquin

2.5

1.9

 

1.8

 

25.0

28.5

r

9.0

r

Stanislaus

2.2

2.0

 

1.6

 

14.0

20.0

r

8.0

r

Tulare

2.6

2.1

 

1.7

 

22.0

21.5

 

7.0

 

Far North

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Butte

3.3

3.1

 

2.2

 

25.0

32.0

r

10.0

r

Lassen

4.8

5.3

 

4.6

 

43.0

69.0

r

70.0

 

Plumas

6.6

15.0

 

5.6

 

55.0

111.0

r

61.0

 

Shasta

4.3

3.1

 

2.7

 

22.0

26.0

 

8.0

 

Siskiyou

5.5

5.7

 

4.2

 

52.0

28.0

r

18.5

 

Tehama

6.0

3.6

 

3.5

 

58.0

43.5

r

39.0

 

Other Calif. Counties

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Amador

5.3

3.2

 

2.9

 

38.0

53.0

r

14.0

r

Calaveras

4.9

4.0

 

2.5

 

80.0

62.0

 

41.5

 

Del Norte

6.5

5.5

 

4.0

 

16.0

30.0

r

69.0

 

El Dorado

3.0

2.8

 

2.0

 

30.0

40.0

r

21.0

r

Humboldt

5.0

4.0

 

3.0

 

17.0

35.0

 

9.0

 

Lake

6.8

4.6

 

4.0

 

51.0

59.5

r

17.5

r

Mariposa

15.4

3.8

 

3.2

 

171.0

103.5

r

29.0

r

Mendocino

11.4

7.5

 

6.7

 

60.0

112.0

r

48.0

r

Mono

5.8

3.6

 

6.5

 

20.0

7.0

r

49.0

 

Nevada

4.4

3.0

 

3.2

 

29.5

37.5

r

17.0

r

Sutter

2.8

2.4

 

2.2

 

22.5

36.0

r

8.0

r

Tuolumne

3.2

2.3

 

2.4

 

33.5

61.5

r

10.0

 

Yolo

2.5

2.1

 

1.8

 

11.0

20.0

r

9.0

r

Yuba

3.1

2.5

 

2.0

 

29.5

25.0

r

7.0

r

r = revised

Article belongs to CAR.org

May
15

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Image via Pexels

Spring Repairs to Offset Winter Damage

Most of the country is waking up from a long winter's nap. But with the arrival of spring also comes the realization that your home may have sustained damage. And it is best to make repairs now to avoid costly renovations later and to help retain the value of your home. Here, Sunshine Properties Real Estate presents a few common issues to watch for and how you can tackle them now for potentially huge savings.

Roofing Damage

According to State Farm, there are many ways that cold weather can tak...

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May
15

The California Avocado Society is a California Non-Profit Corporation. Membership in the California Avocado Society does not involve the marketing of your avocados.

Mother Hass Tree - California Avocado Society

The original tree was really a mistake - a lucky chance seedling. In the late 1920's, Mr. Rudolph Hass, who was a postman, purchased seedling trees from A. R. Rideout of Whittier, for the purpose of developing two acres of budded trees of the Lyon variety. It was Rideout's custom to plant very small seedlings at orchard spacing (12' x 12') at the grove site. The seedlings were grown in 2"x2" x 8" tarpaper open-ended tubes of square cross sections. The seedlings were to grow in place...

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May
15

April 11, 2023   

California REALTORS® urge the state to fully fund California Dream for All Shared Appreciation Loan

LOS ANGELES (April 11) – The CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (C.A.R.) today issued the following statement in response to CalHFA's pause on the California Dream for All Shared Appreciation Loan program within two weeks of its launch:

The California Housing Finance Agency (CalHFA), which administers the loan, opened the program for applications at the end of March, and $300 million allocated of the governor's proposed 2022-2023 budget was exhausted within two weeks. Despite the obvious need and demand, the state has stopped providing funds that have been allocated to the program.

"The CALIFORN...

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May
1

April 24, 2023 – News from last week showed that while buyers perhaps took advantage on lower mortgage rates at the start of the year, a recent upturn in mortgage rates threatens to keep the housing market under pressure. Sales of existing single-family homes took a step back as well as mortgage applications. Residential construction on the other hand, particularly for single-family homes, picked up as builders grew less pessimistic towards the market. The latest report showed builders were more optimistic about present/future sales and stated witnessing an uptick in buyer traffic and a smaller share offering buyer incentives. Lastly, the labor market continued growing although growth slowed considerably in March, especially in California.

Uptick in mortgage interest rates nudges down California home sales: Moderately higher interest rates held California home sales essentially flat in March, totaling over 280,000 on a seasonally adjusted annualized rate for the second consecutive month. The competitiveness in the housing market, however, continues to heat up as homes are selling faster and the sales-to-list-price ratio is improving. As a result, the statewide median home price recorded a healthy increase of 7% on a month-to-month basis after six months of straight declines. That said, the number of homes available for sale continues to tighten as fewer new listings are failing to replenish inventory. All signs point to a market with solid demand, which should help bolster sales through the homebuying season, but tight inventory will prevent a rapid rebound.

Increase in mortgage rates prompted a pullback in mortgage application activity: Mortgage applications decreased 8.8% from one week earlier for the week ending April 14,2023 as mortgage interest rates inched up. Demand continues to demonstrate sensitivity to rate changes with purchase applications declining from the week prior and the same time a year ago, just as mortgage interest rates moved up for the first time in over a month. Refinance activity also fell on a week-to-week and a year ago basis. According to Freddie Mac, the average 30-year fixed rate mortgage bumped up to 6.39% as of Thursday, April 20,2023 – 116 basis points higher than the same time from last year. Although home prices have softened somewhat, rates are stuck above 6%. As such, affordability continues to be a serious issue for many potential homebuyers and with limited inventory of homes, buyers will be more selective about when to act.

Single-family construction picks up, though multifamily drags overall construction down: Total housing starts fell 0.8% to a 1.42-million-unit pace during March while February's strong gain was revised slightly lower to a 1.432-million-unit pace. The monthly dip from February was mainly driven by a decline in multifamily construction which overshadowed the progress made in single-family construction. Although multifamily starts recorded a decline, it continues to advance at a robust clip having an annual unit pace higher than 2022 as a whole. Single-family construction on the other hand despite having its third monthly improvement over the last four months, it remained behind last year by 27.7%. By region, the West was the only one with a decline over the previous month and recorded the greatest pullback over the year at -53.4%. That said, builder sentiment improved for a fourth consecutive month and building permits along with it, which rose 4.1% in March, suggesting an uptick in new construction in the months ahead.

Employment expands in most states including California, but growth is slowing: Nonfarm payrolls rose in 36 states and contracted in 14 in March. A slight step back from the revised down 39 states with job gains in February. California downshifted considerably as it added less than half (8,700) of the net jobs over the month compared to February's 21,800 gain. Construction lost the most jobs, followed by professional & business services and financial activities. Despite the deceleration, strong payroll growth in January bumped up California's monthly average job gains to 32,700 for the first quarter of this year – modestly higher than the 21,200 added the previous quarter. California's unemployment rate remained unchanged, however, at 4.4%. More recently though, jobless claims inched up to 245k last week and although still lower than pre-pandemic levels, a clear upward trend in layoffs since the start of the year provide evidence to further labor market softening ahead.

The typical homeowner gained six figures in wealth over the last decade: A new housing report by the National Association of Realtors®(NAR) revealed that middle-income homeowners accumulated $122,100 in wealth as their homes appreciated by 68% in the last 10 years. While the report also highlighted the existence of disparities between different income levels as well as race/ethnic background, no one was exempt from accruing a minimum of $98,900 in wealth from home price appreciation over the last decade. What's more, homeowners saw their debt drop by 21% and many more were able to refinance and lock-in a rate lower than 4% in the months following the onset of the pandemic, which helped save thousands of dollars in interest rates over the life of the loan. The top 10 areas with the largest wealth gains for low-income owners were all located in California and exceeded $290,000.

Note: The weekly market minute report is updated every Monday by 6:00 PM PST.

Weekly Data for Week Ending 2023-04-22

 

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