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A Major Warning Sign Just Flashed For The Housing Market

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Privately-owned housing starts, which represents the start of construction on new privately-owned houses, fell 9.6% from June to July, a major warning sign for the distressed housing market, according to data released by the U.S. Census Bureau and Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Tuesday.

Moreover, the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB)/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index, which measures sentiment of home builders towards the housing market, fell for the 8th straight month, to 49 out of 100, according to data from the NAHB. A score below 50 is considered negative, and is the first time the score has gone negative since a two-month dip in April and May 2020 during the coronavirus pandemic, before which the most recent negative score was June 2014, CNBC reported.

“Given the context that all these indicators are pointing in the wrong direction, I am confident that the latest Census Bureau report on new residential construction [is] not a statistical fluke but an established trend downward,” E.J. Antoni, research fellow for regional economics in the Center for Data Analysis at The Heritage Foundation, told the Daily Caller News Foundation. “At this point, the Federal Reserve’s failure to liquidate its Mortgage-Backed Securities might be the only thing propping up the housing market.”

The NAHB “index has declined every month this year, is down 40% from its December level, and is now in contraction territory,” Antoni told the DCNF.

Housing has gotten increasingly difficult to afford, with the median price of a house increasing every month since September 2021 from $361,000 to $423,300 in June, according to data from the National Association of Realtors (NAR). However, despite this nearly 17% increase in the median cost of a home, the qualifying yearly income for such a home has skyrocketed from $58,176 to $93,312, a 60.4% increase, the NAR data reveals.

Privately-owned housing starts were down 8.1% year-on-year in July, according to the Census Bureau report. Despite increased costs for land, labor and materials, about 1 in 5 builders opted to lower prices by an average of 5% in order to retain or attract customers, CNBC reported.

Mortgage rates fell in 2020 during the pandemic, which led to massive demand while simultaneously disincentivizing the listing of houses, driving up prices, the Motley Fool reported recently. For a consumer at the U.S. median income of $67,521, a typical mortgage would take up 30.7% of yearly income, according to the Motley Fool.

The Motley Fool does not use median home prices to determine this, but rather a “typical” price based on Zillow’s Home Value Index which  is weighted to account for changes in the housing market.

The margin of error on the Census Bureau’s data was significant, at 8.6% with a 90% confidence interval, indicating that the precise value of 9.6% may not be accurate, according to the Census Bureau’s monthly report on residential construction. However, Antoni told the DCNF that the data was useful for establishing trends, and when comparing to other data sets.

The U.S. Census Bureau did not immediately respond to a Daily Caller News Foundation request for comment.

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