WASHINGTON – Housing affordability conditions remained favorable
during the second quarter, but rising interest rates and higher home
prices mean affordability declined from the second-highest level in
21 years during the first quarter, according to the National
Association of Realtors®.
NAR's composite Housing Affordability
Index was 133.6 during the second quarter of 2004, down 10.5
percentage points from 144.1 in the first quarter; it was 7.6 points
below the same period a year earlier when it stood at 143.8. The
first quarter 2003 reading of 144.9 was the highest index since
1973.
David Lereah, NAR's chief economist, said it is important to put
the decline in perspective. "Housing affordability conditions for
the U.S. as a whole have been so favorable that even with a decline,
the current reading is quite good," he said. "The last time the
affordability index was at this level was in the second quarter of
2002, and that was a record year for home sales."
The index shows the nation's typical household had 133.6 percent
of the income needed to purchase a home at the median existing-home
price in the second quarter, which was $183,800. This index measures
affordability factors for all homebuyers making a 20 percent
downpayment, with an index of 100 defined as the point where a
median-income family has the exact amount of income needed to
purchase a median-priced existing home. The second-quarter median
family income was projected to be $54,884.
NAR President Walt McDonald, broker-owner of Walt McDonald Real
Estate in Riverside, Calif., said the typical household is well
poised to buy a home in most of the country. "The average buyer
could afford to buy a home costing nearly 4.5 times their income in
the second quarter," he said. "Even so, the median-income family
spends just over 3.3 times their income for a home, meaning housing
continues to be an excellent investment. Affordability conditions
are expected to be fairly stable during the second half of the year,
which will contribute to a new annual record for home sales."
In the second quarter, a median-income household could afford to buy
a home costing $245,600, which is well above the national median
price of $183,800.
According to the Federal Housing Finance Board, the average
effective mortgage interest rate for existing homes was 5.73 percent
during the second quarter, up from 5.64 percent in the fourth
quarter; it was 5.58 percent in the second quarter of 2003. This is
a weighted average interest rate between fixed and adjustable loans,
including the cost of points, and represents a true bottom-line
mortgage cost.
Affordability for first-time homebuyers also declined in the
second quarter, down 6.4 percentage points to 77.0 from a reading of
83.4 in the first quarter; it was 5.9 points below the second
quarter 2003 index.
The association's First-Time Homebuyer Affordability Index shows
a typical first-time buyer household, aged 25 to 44, with an income
of $31,103, had 77.0 percent of the income needed to purchase a
typical starter home with a 10 percent downpayment. The median
starter home price was $156,200 during the second quarter.
The index shows the typical first-time buyer could afford a home
costing $120,300. "First-time buyers are in a fairly good position
in most of the midsection of the country, but in higher priced
markets they have to make some adjustments," McDonald said. "In
reality, entry level buyers are making smaller downpayments – in the
range of 3 to 6 percent – and are using loan programs to afford more
house for a given income."
The National Association of Realtors® , "The Voice for Real
Estate," is America's largest trade association, representing 1
million Realtors® involved in all aspects of the residential and
commercial real estate industries.