Tag Archives: firsttime

First-time homebuyers are being shut out of the market like never before

If you bought your first home during the past year, consider yourself one of the fortunate few.

Skyrocketing home prices and climbing interest rates pushed the share of first-time homebuyers to an all-time low, according to a new report from the National Association of Realtors. And those first-time buyers were the oldest they have ever been, as the growing lack of affordability forced people to wait longer to reach life milestones like buying a home.

First-time buyers made up just 26% of all homebuyers in the year ending June 2022, down from 34% the year before, according to NAR’s 2022 report on homebuyers and sellers. That was the lowest in the survey’s 41-year history. The share of buyers purchasing a first home has sat between 30% and 40% over the past decade and reached as high as 50% in 2009.

The age of a first-time homebuyer also rose, with the typical age reaching 36 years old, up from 33 last year. The typical repeat buyer’s age also climbed, reaching 59 years old, up from 56. Both are all-time highs.

As home prices soared and mortgage rates rose, buyers’ income dropped, the report found.

The median household income for first-time buyers slipped to $71,000 during the year ended in June, down from $86,500 in the previous 12-month period. Meanwhile, repeat buyers had a median income of $96,000, down from $112,500 the previous year.

Buyers typically purchased their homes for 100% of the asking price, the research showed, with 28% paying more than the asking price.

“For first-time homebuyers, the lack of affordability is playing a key role in holding them back from homeownership,” said Jessica Lautz, NAR’s vice president of demographics and behavioral insights. “They don’t have the equity that repeat buyers have for a down payment or to buy in cash. They have to save while paying more for rent, as well as student debt, child care and other expenses, and this year were facing increasing home prices while mortgage rates are also climbing.”

The time period covered by the research, from July 2021 to June 2022, included some of the steepest home price increases, reaching a peak median home price of $413,800 this past June. Inventory, hampered by decades of underbuilding, was at record low levels, which kept the competition to buy a home frenzied and pushed prices higher. By April of this year, mortgage rates began to surge past the 5% mark. But, after the Fed embarked on a series of interest rate hikes in order to tame inflation, they climbed to as high as 7% by late October. On Thursday, mortgage rates dipped slightly to 6.95%.

Together these factors have made for one of the most challenging and least affordable housing markets in decades.

Economists and housing advocates have cautioned that the increasingly unaffordable housing market is locking many potential buyers, especially buyers of color, out of homeownership.

The research showed there were fewer Black and Asian homebuyers during the year studied, while the share of White and Hispanic buyers grew.

During the year ending in June, the overwhelming majority of buyers, 88%, were White, up from 82% the previous year. Of all home buyers, 8% were Hispanic, up from 7%. Meanwhile, 3% were Black and 2% were Asian, both dropping from 6% a year ago.

This is likely to exacerbate the racial homeownership gap, in which 72% of White Americans are homeowners while only 43% of Black Americans own a home, according to NAR.

“We have been talking about the impacts, but this year we are seeing it realized in the data,” said Lautz. “Unless we have substantial homebuilding at affordable prices, we will continue to see first-time homebuyers held back.”

Lautz said that prior NAR research has shown that would-be Black homebuyers have lower incomes, higher debt and less likelihood of family support for a down payment than other groups. The data also showed that Black renters are also more squeezed, with a larger share paying more than 30% of their income to their landlord.

“With the rise of rents and how that is hitting first-time homebuyers, it impacts Black buyers more than it would any other group,” said Lautz.

Because of the affordability crunch, homebuyers seemed less able or interested in buying in the area where they currently live. The median distance between a buyer’s current home and their newly purchased home was typically 15 miles between 2018 and 2021. The typical distance during the year ending in June 2022 was 50 miles.

Lautz said the research showed buyers faced hard decisions to close the deal on a home they could afford.

The typical home purchased was 1,800 square feet, had three bedrooms and two bathrooms, and was built in 1986, the NAR report found. That is a smaller and older home than in previous years.

“For a lot of people something had to give in the equation: their location, the condition of the home or its size,” said Lautz.

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Mortgage demand from first-time buyers makes a comeback

A real estate agent shows a home to a prospective buyer in Miami.

Getty Images

Mortgage demand continues to weaken, still right around a 22-year low, but there was a sign in the weekly numbers that first-time buyers may be slowly returning.

Mortgage applications to purchase a home fell 1% last week compared with the previous week, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association’s seasonally adjusted index. Volume was 21% lower than the same week one year ago. There was, however, a jump in demand for loans offering lower down payments.

“Last week’s purchase results varied, with conventional applications declining 2% and government applications increasing 4%, which is potentially a sign of more first-time homebuyer activity,” said Joel Kan, an MBA economist.

He also noted that the average purchase loan size continued to trend lower, as homebuying at the high end of the market weakens.

Mortgage rates increased for all loan types last week. The average contract interest rate for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages with conforming loan balances ($647,200 or less) rose to 5.65% from 5.45%, with points climbing to 0.68 from 0.57 (including the origination fee) for loans with a 20% down payment.

As a result of the sharp increase in rates, demand for loan refinances dropped 3% for the week and were 83% lower than the same week one year ago.

Borrowers also moved away from adjustable-rate loans, which are no longer offering the bargains they did just a few months ago.

“The spread between conforming fixed-rate loans and ARM loans narrowed to 84 basis points from over 100 basis points the prior week,” Kan said. “This movement made fixed rate loans relatively more attractive than ARMs, thereby reducing the ARM share further from highs seen earlier this year.”

Mortgage rates moved even higher to start this week, as the stock market sold off on renewed fears of a recession. Investors are waiting for what they expect to be hawkish sentiment from the Federal Reserve at a meeting later this week in Jackson Hole, Wyoming.

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Existing home sales fall 2% as first-time buyers are priced out

Sales of previously owned homes declined 2% in August from July to a seasonally adjusted annualized rate of 5.88 million units, according to the National Association of Realtors.

Sales were 1.5% lower than August 2020 for the first annual decline. Sales, however, are still above pre-pandemic levels.

These numbers are a count of home closings and are based on contracts likely signed in June and July.

“The housing sector is clearly settling down,” said Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the Realtors, who called last year’s super surge “an anomaly.”

The supply of homes for sale fell 1.5% month to month to 1.29 million at the end of August. Compared with August 2020, inventory is down 13%, but that comparison has been steadily shrinking for several months. At the current sales pace there was a 2.6-month supply.

“We do expect more inventory coming up, maybe with the end of the eviction moratorium,” Yun said.

Tight supply pushed the median price of an existing home sold in August to $356,700, an increase of 14.9% from August of 2020. While the gain is very large, the annual comparisons are moderating as sales slow down.

The median is also being skewed by stronger activity on the higher end of the market. Sales of homes priced below $250,000 fell compared with a year ago, while sales of those priced above $1 million jumped 40%.

First-time buyers are clearly struggling with higher prices, falling to just a 19% share of all sales, the lowest since January 2019. Historically, first-time buyers usually make up 40% of buyers.

Yun said the market is becoming less competitive overall, with buyer traffic declining and the number of buyers waiving inspections, a competitive tactic, also falling. The number of offers on a typical home is now 3.8 compared with 4.5 a month ago.

Mortgage rates began falling in June from 3.25% down to a low of 2.78% on the popular 30-year fixed by the start of August, according to Mortgage News Daily. The drop would have helped first-time buyers most, as they tend to have the least wiggle room financially and are the most sensitive to interest rates, but clearly they are not helping enough.

Sales of newly built homes in July, which are based on signed contracts, not closings, and therefore would match up with the latest existing home sales numbers, rose slightly month to month but were down 27% from July 2020, according to the U.S. Census.

Builders have been raising prices to keep up with soaring costs for land, labor and materials. Recent earnings reports and guidance from several of the nation’s largest builders note supply chain issues that are hampering production and leading to fewer new home closings.

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ID. Life: VW reveals tiny, cheap electric SUV aimed at first-time car buyers

Priced for young, first-time car buyers, the ID. Life will cost about €20,000, the equivalent of just under $24,000 at current exchange rates. VW did not say which specific markets the new model would be offered in.

Since it’s just a concept vehicle, the ID. Life’s designers have included some features that might not appear in the actual production vehicle.

For instance, the car is made from several different recycled and renewable materials. Wood chips were used as a coloring agent in the car’s paint, VW said, and the lightweight removable roof is made from recycled bottles. The tires are made from biologically based oils, rice husks and natural rubber, VW claimed.

The open-topped steering wheel has a touchscreen at its center to control a number of driving features, including the gear selector. The driver’s own cell phone can be used like a center touchscreen.

The concept vehicle also includes a number of features that, essentially, turn the car into a mobile entertainment center.

“The customer of tomorrow won’t simply want to get from A to B; they will be much more interested in the experiences that a car can offer,” said Volkswagen brand chief executive Ralf Brandstätter. “The ID. Life is our answer to this.”

The little crossover even has a video game projector along with a projection screen that rises from the dashboard. The front and back seats can fold down flat to be used as beds or to make room for large cargo.

The ID. Life is based on the same electric car engineering as some current VW models, such as the ID.4 crossover SUV. The ID. Life is smaller, though, and it has front-wheel-drive instead of rear-wheel-drive like VW’s other ID models. The car can go from zero to 60 miles in under seven seconds and will be able to travel about 248 miles on a single charge based on European testing parameters, according to VW.

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Sophie Turner ogles over first-time father Joe Jonas after he showcases ripped abs in mirror selfie

Sophie Turner ogles over husband and first-time father Joe Jonas after he showcases ripped abs in shirtless mirror selfie: ‘1-800-DIAL-A-DADDY’

Joe Jonas and wife Sophie Turner became first-time parents when they welcomed their daughter Willa to the world in July 2020.

With their hands full raising their child and directing their successful careers, it’s nice to see the British-born actress getting flirty with her husband when she reacted to a shirtless image of him on social media.

This all started on Saturday afternoon when the DNCE singer took to his Instagram Story and posted a mirror selfie showcasing his upper body; particularly his ripped abs.

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Flirty: Joe Jonas, 31, showed off his ripped abs when he posted a mirror selfie of himself shirtless, which caught the attention of his wife, Sophie Turner

The selfie appears to have been was taken in a home office space, just outside a bathroom.

Apparently dressed in brown overalls, Jonas pulled off the top part of the classic ensemble and secured it around his waist.

He then struck a side pose into a full-length mirror hanging on the wall, while tightening his abdominal muscles for maximum effect on the ab region.

The singer’s wife, Sophie Turner couldn’t resist re-posting the photo on her own Insta-Story, along with a some flirty gifs

The Game Of Thrones star, 25, had fun referencing Jonas is a father now by adding the gif: ‘1-800-DIAL-A-DADDY

From the looks of the rips along his flat stomach, the 31-year-old has been putting hard work at the gym during COVID-19 lockdown.

Not long after sharing the photo, Jonas’ wife couldn’t resist re-posting it on her own Insta-Story, along with some flirty gifs.

‘Bad Dad’ and ‘1800-DIAL-A-DADDY’, the Dark Phoenix star added to emphasize her husband’s toned body in the sizzling snap. 

Funny: About an hour after their online flirting, Jonas showed off his clever and comedic side when shared a quick video of himself casually sitting at a dinner table eating

It quickly becomes apparent that Jonas is eating McDonald’s

About an hour after their online flirting, Jonas showed off his clever and comedic side when shared a quick video of himself casually sitting at a dinner table eating.

It begins with a shot of the table and then pans to the right to show the Jonas Brothers star eating a meal from McDonald’s. As the camera moves close to the food, just behind Jonas, viewers can see he’s using a Spotify music award of recognition for his band DNCE as part of his plate setting.

It reads: ‘Spotify — In recognition of 1,000,000,000 steams’ — for the DNCE song ‘Cake By The Ocean.’

Don’t make a mess: As the camera moves close to his food, just behind Jonas, viewers can see he’s using a Spotify music award of recognition for his band DNCE as his plate setting

Duel use: The plaque is Spotify’s recognition of 1,000,000,000 streams for DNCE’s song , Cake By The Ocean, which was released back in September 2015

The 2015 song from their debut EP, Swaay, turned into a smash hit for the group, which was formed after Jonas parted ways with the Jonas Brothers. 

‘One Billion never tasted so good! Thank you @spotify! @agraver @lucylough @bellajackson,’ he wrote in the caption in a play on the words to incorporate McDs into the equation.

Released on September 18, 2015, Cake By The See hit 1 billion streams combined back in 2017.

New parents: The couple, who will celebrated two years of marriage on May 1, welcomed their daughter Willa to the world on July 22, 2020

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