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US home sellers slash prices in sudden halt to pandemic boom

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THE turn in the US housing market has been sharp and swift. Just ask Karlyn and Jack Stenhjem, would-be downsizers who dropped the asking price for their home near Seattle by almost $100,000 since May.

The brick Everett, Washington, house, with private access to lakes and trails, is now available for $899,000, a price that makes Karlyn Stenhjem “cringe.”

“Two months ago our house was valued at $1.1 million on Zillow,” she said. “When you look at the map of listings now, the little red dots are on top of the other little red dots.”

The pandemic housing boom is careening to a halt as the fastest-rising mortgage rates in at least half a century upend affordability for homebuyers, catching many sellers wrong-footed with prices that are too high. It’s an astonishing turnaround. Just a few months ago, house hunters felt pushed to make offers within days, waive inspections and bid way above asking. Now they can sleep on it and maybe even shop for a better deal.



It doesn’t mean real estate is heading for a crash on the order of 2008. But when a market reaches these heights, even a drop toward normalcy will feel steep. And of course, a recession could make everything worse.

“The housing market is absolutely in need of a reset,” said George Ratiu, senior economist at Realtor.com. “Overheated markets are unsustainable. Prices will have to adjust. We’re seeing the slowdown in growth already. The question is whether prices drop or move sideways.”

Home listings, while still low, increased in June at the fastest pace in records dating to 2017, according to data released this week from Realtor.com. The cooling is particularly pronounced in pandemic boom areas such as Las Vegas, Denver and California’s Riverside and Sacramento, as well as further east in Austin, Texas; Raleigh, North Carolina; Nashville, Tennessee; and Tampa, Florida.

Sellers with lofty ambitions are having to pare expectations. In the Austin, Phoenix and Las Vegas metro areas, almost a third of listings in June had price cuts, the Realtor.com data show.

Soaring borrowing costs are only part of the issue. Stock-market turmoil and recession fears do little for buyer confidence. And with the country now in a form of COVID normalcy, many of the people who were apt to make pandemic-inspired relocations have already done so.

In Naples, Florida, agent Jennifer DeFrancesco is advising some sellers to drop prices. The flood of calls from buyers in the Northeast have eased. They don’t feel as flush or flexible now that crypto and stock markets are tumbling and employers are demanding more office presence. And those who felt stifled by Covid restrictions in New York and Boston aren’t as antsy to move now that most mandates have lifted, Ms. DeFrancesco said.

“In the month of May, everything came to a screeching halt,” Ms. DeFrancesco said. “We have a rule of thumb that says if you don’t have any showings in 14 days, it’s suggested that you’re 10% overpriced.”

Older buyers are especially worried because they depend on their stocks and savings to live, said Carolyn Young, broker associate with Christie’s International Real Estate Sereno in the East Bay region outside of San Francisco. The buyer pullback has been dramatic for homes she’s marketing at Trilogy at the Vineyards, a 55-and-over community in Brentwood.



She has reduced list prices by $50,000 to $100,000 because cuts that are quick and substantial get buyers in, she said.

“For sellers, it’s devastating, especially if they bought something else earlier and paid too much for that,” Ms. Young said.

Still, most sellers are in a position to reap big profits because they’re sitting on a mountain of equity. In May, US single-family house prices jumped almost 45% from May 2020, the biggest two-year increase on record, according to an analysis of National Association of Realtors data going back to 1968. That capped off a decade of rapid gains.

That means even if homeowners lose jobs in a recession, they’re unlikely to be forced to sell at a loss, limiting the prospects of a widespread foreclosure crisis. And unlike the subprime loans that tanked the economy 14 years ago, the latest boom was built on ultra-low mortgage rates, not risky lending, with demand far outstripping supply.

Even though existing-home sales have been falling since February, prices tend to be stickier and sellers have only started adjusting expectations. With inventory climbing from drastically low levels, prices in many areas are apt to keep rising, just at a slower pace.

Still, the housing downturn will have economic ripple effects. Fewer buyers mean less money spent on landscapers and home decor — to wit, luxury-furnishings seller RH on Wednesday slashed its sales forecast for the second time in a month. It’s also a hit to the real estate industry, where agents and mortgage brokers are getting laid off by the thousands.

Even if home prices moderate, a lack of sales could exacerbate the nation’s housing affordability crisis by pushing more would-be buyers into a rental market where costs are already soaring. That could force young people back into their parents’ basements or to pile in with multiple roommates and drive more families into homelessness.

“I’m worried that this mortgage affordability crisis this year will spill over into a worsening rental affordability crisis,” said Jeff Tucker, senior economist at Zillow.

For now, Daniel Sweeney, a Realtor with Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices in Henderson, Nevada, is telling sellers not to panic. Buyers are in shock because of higher rates, but they’ll be back, he tells them. Like commuters upset about $6-per-gallon gas, they’ll bend and pay up, he said.

Still, a house flipper is trying to pull out of a contract to buy a property from one of Mr. Sweeney’s sellers. The investor had 40 properties listed for sale and “nobody looking at them,” Mr. Sweeney said.

“It’s a fast change and that has made people feel concerned that it could get worse,” he said.

The Stenhjems are up against the clock. They’re already paying rent on a one-story home they plan to move to. Jack Stenhjem is 87 and Ms. Karlyn’s not much younger, and the stairs in their old house are getting harder to manage.

The price cut has gotten a couple buyers interested but now they’re wondering whether to make some improvements to the house because so many competing properties have been updated, Ms. Karlyn said.

“It would be nice to make enough on this home in case we live to 100,” she said. “We’re giving away our house at this price.” — Bloomberg

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The article was originally published in Business World.

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