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| | | | | Introduction | Housing still looks soft, even with mortgage rates off their 2024 highs. The mix matters: construction is wobbling, resale activity is only stabilizing, and affordability remains too tight to call a clean turn. For markets, that keeps housing in the slow-growth camp rather than making it a fresh source of upside. |
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| | | | | | Market Movers | The clearest signal is that supply is not accelerating enough to offset the demand shock from higher financing costs. According to recent reporting on delayed Census data, single-family starts rose 4.1% to a 981,000 annual rate in December, but single-family permits, a cleaner forward read, fell 1.7% to 881,000. That combination suggests builders are finishing or restarting projects, but not yet leaning into a broad new cycle. | Rates are part of the story, but not the whole story. Freddie Mac said in its latest weekly mortgage survey that the 30-year fixed rate averaged 6.00% on March 5, down sharply from 6.63% a year earlier but still well above the levels that once unlocked broad affordability. In market terms, lower rates have reduced the pressure, but they have not fully repaired the payment shock that has kept turnover and construction cautious. |
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| | | | | What's Next | Resales finally showed a pulse in February, though the rebound looks more like relief than reacceleration. In fresh coverage of the latest existing-home sales report, Reuters said sales rose 1.7% to a 4.09 million annual rate, beating expectations, while the median existing-home price rose just 0.3% from a year earlier to $398,000. Inventory improved to 1.29 million units, but that still leaves the market well below pre-pandemic supply norms. | That is why housing has not yet flipped from drag to green light. Starts and permits are telling investors that builders still face cost pressure and uncertain demand, while existing sales are telling investors that lower rates can help at the margin. If mortgage rates stay near 6% and labor markets cool further, housing could move from a slow-growth headwind to a clearer recession tell, especially if permits keep rolling over before sales can build momentum. |
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| | | | | Closing Insight | The housing market is no longer in free fall, but it is not healthy enough to lead the economy higher. For investors, permits are the key early warning signal and existing sales are the reality check. |
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