Market Expects 5% Home Price Growth

The numbers from the housing sector by and large have been weaker than originally expected during the first months of 2014. A new, revised 2014 outlook from Freddie Mac is out, and we have compared it to the most recent outlook from Fannie Mae from the end of April. The result is that construction and home sales are expected to be up.

The bad news is that appreciation seems to have peaked, which would coincide with some of the data out in recent weeks signaling that new homebuyers were suffering from sticker shock.  Freddie Mac’s outlook is for new-home construction to increase by 18 percent, with an average home-price appreciation moderating to an annual growth of 5 percent in 2014. Freddie Mac also maintained its projection that new- and existing-home sales will total 5.5 million for 2014, the same as for 2013. Single-family mortgage originations are expected to drop about 35 percent in 2014, but that is from a large decline in refinancing. Freddie Mac also sees refinance accounting for about 40 percent of originations in 2014, down from close to 60 percent in 2013. Lastly, Freddie Mac assumes that the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage rate will gradually rise higher to about 4.6 percent by the end of 2014, with fixed rates rising gradually during the second half of the year due to Federal Reserve tapering its bond and mortgage-backed security purchasing.

Fannie Mae still only has its outlook as of April, and that should be updated shortly. The outlook at the time was for housing starts to rise to 1.051 million in 2014 from 925,000 in 2013. Fannie Mae also forecast that the median existing-home price would rise to $207,000 from $197,000, with median new-home prices rising to $277,000 from $266,000. Its forecast at the time was for mortgage rates to rise to 4.5 percent on the 30-year mortgages, as well as for price appreciation of 5 percent on existing homes and 4.1 percent higher prices for new homes.