Beyond the Warning Light: A Nuanced US Housing Outlook

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Over the last few years, the US housing market has defied expectations as prices, helped by constrained supply, have remained resilient—despite high mortgage rates and affordability challenges for homebuyers. But the outlook appears to be darkening, with recent headlines seizing on potentially adverse trends. We think these fears are overblown, as market fundamentals suggest a more nuanced and less fraught outlook than headlines imply.

We regard signs of slowing home-price appreciation (Display, left) and an increase in supply (Display, right) as noteworthy but expect their impact to be muted and that home prices at a national level will remain flat to slightly positive over the coming year.

Home price graph

Fundamentals Remain Strong

A key factor in home-price resilience to date has been a supply constraint caused by the so-called lock-in effect. US home loans are mostly fixed rate, and homeowners who locked in cheap mortgages before rates began to rise in 2021 are reluctant to sell, as selling would mean financing their next property at a higher cost. Since rates rose, market activity, as measured by applications to purchase properties or refinance loans, has fallen significantly.

It's against this background that the rising supply trend needs to be understood. The real-estate industry measures supply in terms of “months of supply”—that is, today’s estimate of the number of months it would take to clear current for-sale inventory. Thus, the metric reflects the overall level of market activity, not just the rate at which new supply is becoming available.