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Cause and Effect: Budgets Flatten as Rates Rise

Wages are up, but homebuyer budgets have remained flat over the past three months, meaning the market is seeing its slowest growth rate in two years. 

This information comes to us from a new analysis by Redfin which found that the average budget users set on its website have only increased by 0.3% from the first of the year to the end of April. 

In comparison, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, average gross wages grew 5% over the last year. 

According to Redfin, declining budgets are a “leading indicator” that home-price growth has passed its peak and is expected to slow in the coming months. 

The flattening of budgets is also a sign that rising mortgage rates are having a “major impact” on how much money buyers can spend on homes as more of their money will go towards interest payments. 

Recently, Redfin found that budgets hit a peak growth rate of 12.2% in April 2021 which was three months before home-sale prices hit their peak growth rate of 22.6% in July 2021. Redfin’s economists further predict that the cooldown in budgets will lead to a slowing in price growth by two to three months' time as buyers typically search multiple outlets online for months before making a purchase. Sellers are slower to adjust to the cooling market, but they are starting to react to buyers’ declining budgets: 21% of home sellers dropped their asking price in the last four weeks—up from 10% a year earlier. 

Budgets began flattening at the beginning of the year. Budgets saw a 5.1% increase year-over-year in December, but have declined every month since. The cooldown coincides with sharply rising mortgage rates. Mortgage rates hovered around 3% for most of 2021, and now they’re sitting around 5.2% after a record-fast increase that started in January. 

Given the standard norm of a 30% income-to-mortgage ratio, an average borrower can afford a $427,250 mortgage at the current 5.2% interest rate. This number was $517,000 when interest rates were at 3%. 

“When mortgage rates go up, buyers’ budgets go down,” said Taylor Marr, Redfin’s Deputy Chief Economist. “And when buyers’ budgets go down, sellers have to meet buyers where they are. Budgets haven’t fallen from a year ago and we don’t expect home-sale prices to fall, either. But the fact that budget growth has slowed so significantly is one sign among many that home-price growth will continue to slow as the year goes on.” 

Redfin concluded by saying that slowing price growth is good news for homebuyers, but buyers will still have to balance that with rising interest rates. Sellers should keep in mind that buyers can be sensitive to fluctuating interest rates and should price their home accordingly because buyers are beginning to claw back some of its power from sellers. 

“Buyers are qualified to borrow less money because of rising rates, which means they’re searching for less expensive homes,” said Fresno Redfin agent Dennis Rozadilla. “There’s still limited supply and a surplus of buyers, but buyers are pickier now and their budgets are more limited.” 

About Author: Kyle G. Horst

Kyle Horst
Kyle G. Horst is a reporter for DS News and MReport. A graduate of the University of Texas at Tyler, he has worked for a number of daily, weekly, and monthly publications in South Dakota and Texas. With more than 10 years of experience in community journalism, he has won a number of state, national, and international awards for his writing and photography. He most recently worked as editor of Community Impact Newspaper covering a number of Dallas-Ft. Worth communities on a hyperlocal level. Contact Kyle G. at [email protected].
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