Tight supply sends home prices up

A sign advertises a house for sale in Los Angeles in January. U.S. home prices jumped in January compared with a year ago as a tight supply of available properties spurred bidding wars in many cities.
A sign advertises a house for sale in Los Angeles in January. U.S. home prices jumped in January compared with a year ago as a tight supply of available properties spurred bidding wars in many cities.

WASHINGTON -- U.S. home prices jumped in January from a year earlier at the fastest pace in nearly 2½ years, as a tight supply of houses for sale spurred bidding wars in many cities.

The Standard & Poor's CoreLogic Case-Shiller 20-city home price index, released Tuesday, increased 5.7 percent in January, the most since July 2014.

Americans stepped up home buying in January, even as mortgage rates rose. Many buyers likely sought to close their deals before rates increased further. The Federal Reserve implemented its third rate increase in two years March 15, but economists at S&P Dow Jones Indexes say higher rates won't slow sales until later this year.

The biggest price gains were in Seattle, Portland and Denver, which have topped the other cities in the index for months.

Mark Fleming, chief economist at financial services company First American Corp., said that still-low mortgage rates and steady hiring will likely support further housing demand.

"Low mortgage rates and economic growth set against a low inventory of homes for sale will drive a strong sellers' market and further rising prices this spring," Fleming said.

David Blitzer, chairman of the S&P Dow Jones Index Committee, said the Fed's most recent increase won't push up mortgage rates very much and shouldn't affect sales. Average 30-year mortgage rates typically track the yield on the 10-year Treasury note. That yield is usually driven by several factors, including broader economic conditions and investor demand for safe assets such as Treasurys.

Still, if the Fed raises rates three or four more times this year, "rising mortgage rates could become a concern," Blitzer said in a statement. Fed officials currently forecast two additional increases.

Robust price gains could eventually make housing less affordable, Blitzer said.

"Tight supplies and rising prices may be deterring some people from trading up to a larger house, further aggravating supplies because fewer people are selling their homes," Blitzer said. "The prices also hurt affordability as higher prices and mortgage rates shrink the number of households that can afford to buy at current price levels.

"At some point, this process will force prices to level off and decline -- however we don't appear to be there yet," Blitzer said.

There were just 1.75 million residences listed for sale in February, 6.4 percent lower than a year ago, near the lowest level since the National Association of Realtors began tracking the data in 1999.

Information for this article was contributed by Michelle Jamrisko of Bloomberg News.

Business on 03/29/2017

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