More than 4.2 million first-time homebuyers want to enter the US housing market in 2014, but headwinds including tight inventory levels, rising mortgage interest rates, growing affordability issues may stymie these aspirations: Zillow

Allison Oesterle

Allison Oesterle

SEATTLE , March 13, 2014 (press release) – Homeownership Aspirations Among Current Renters Highest in Markets Hard-Hit by Housing Recession, According to Inaugural Zillow Housing Confidence Index
- U.S. Housing Confidence Index currently stands at 63.7.
- If all renters indicating they want to buy a home in the next year actually did, it would represent more than 4.2 million first-time home sales.
- Renters in Miami, Atlanta & Las Vegas expressed the most desire to become homeowners.
- All aspirations unlikely to be realized soon, as homeownership headwinds persist.


Millions of current renters nationwide aspire to buy a home in the next year, according to the inaugural edition of the Zillow Housing Confidence Index (ZHCI)i, suggesting strong demand among potential first-time homebuyers if market conditions are favorable. But existing headwinds, including tight inventory, rising mortgage interest rates and growing affordability problems in a handful of areas, may make it difficult for potential buyers to follow through on those aspirations as the market enters the busy spring home shopping season.

In 19 of the 20 large metro areas surveyed, more than 5 percentii of all residents indicated they wanted to buy a home in the next year. Among current renters, homeownership aspirations were particularly strong, with about 10 percent of all renters nationwide saying they would like to buy within the next 12 months. The vast majority of these respondents also said they were confident or somewhat confident they could afford homeownership nowiii. If all renters that indicated they wanted to buy actually did purchase a home in the next year, it would represent more than 4.2 million first-time home salesiv, more than double the roughly 2.1 million first-time home buyers in 2013.

Homeownership aspirations among current renters were the highest in Miami, Atlanta and Las Vegas, three metro areas that were among the hardest-hit by the housing recession, according to the Zillow Homeownership Aspirations Index (ZHAI), a component of the broader ZHCI.

But despite strong desires to own a home, market conditions remain mixed for potential buyers. While inventory is up nationally compared to a year ago (up 11.1 percent), it still remains well below optimal levels, and has fallen year-over-year in eight of the 20 metro areas surveyed by the ZHCI. Recent data from the Census Bureau also indicates that the share of new homes built as rental units has grown, while the share of new construction dedicated to the kinds of single-family homes likely to be favored by first-time buyers is downv.

Mortgage interest rates are also on the rise, currently standing at about 4.2 percent nationally, according to the Zillow Mortgage Marketplace, well above 2013 lows of roughly 3.3 percent. And as interest rates rise, homes in a number of particularly hot markets, including San Francisco, Los Angeles, San Jose and San Diego, are already looking unaffordable for buyers with lower incomes, especially first-time buyers, as more income is devoted to mortgage payments.

"For the housing market to continue its recovery, it is critical that homes are both available and remain affordable to meet the strong demand these survey results are predicting, particularly from first-time homebuyers," said Zillow® Chief Economist Dr. Stan Humphries. "Even after a wrenching housing recession, this data shows that the dream of homeownership remains very much alive and well, even in those areas that were hardest hit. But these aspirations must also contend with the current reality, and in many areas, conditions remain difficult for buyers. The market is moving toward more balance between buyers and sellers, but it is a slow and uneven process."

The Zillow Housing Confidence Index, sponsored by Zillow, Inc. and developed by Pulsenomics LLC, is measured on a 0 to 100 scale, with readings above 50 indicating positive sentiment. The overall ZHCI for the U.S. stood at 63.7 at the start of the yearvi. Of the 20 metro areas surveyed, 11 had individual confidence levels higher than the U.S. as a whole. The overall U.S. ZHAI among all households, which measures consumers' plans to buy and their attitudes toward the social value of homeownership, stood at 62.4.

"While it is reassuring to see all of the headline ZHCIs in positive territory, the underlying indicators of homeownership aspirations, housing market conditions and expectations for each metro area and tenure segment reveal significant variability," said Pulsenomics Founder Terry Loebs. "Several of these drivers of overall housing confidence registered negative or only marginally positive readings in some cities. These data confirm that real estate recovery and economic healing are relative, local phenomena, and in some instances, likely reflect the lingering psychological impact of the housing bust."


Metro Area

Overall Housing

Confidence

Index (all

households)

Homeownership

Aspirations Index

(all renters)

% Current

Renters

Indicating

they plan to

buy in 1 year

% All

Households

Indicating

they plan to

buy in 1 year

Jan. 2013-

Jan. 2014 %

Change in

Inventory

UNITED STATES

63.7

59.3

10%

8%

11.1%

San Jose

69.4

62.4

9%

7%

-5.9%

Miami

67.5

67.4

18%

14%

7.7%

San Diego

67.2

60.4

12%

8%

-12.3%

Phoenix

66.7

61.1

15%

10%

30.5%

San Francisco

66.4

51.1

5%

7%

-1.8%

Washington, DC

65.8

57.0

9%

6%

14.6%

Dallas

64.4

63.0

12%

9%

-12.3%

Denver

64.4

63.0

15%

8%

-3.8%

Los Angeles

64.4

54.8

6%

6%

0.3%

Seattle

64.2

55.4

10%

8%

12.7%

Las Vegas

64.1

63.4

9%

10%

42.8%

Boston

63.4

58.4

8%

6%

-11.2%

Atlanta

62.9

63.9

14%

7%

10.7%

New York

62.9

61.6

5%

4%

9.0%

Chicago

62.6

59.0

9%

7%

-4.5%

Minneapolis

62.6

53.8

7%

5%

15.0%

Tampa

62.6

58.2

13%

8%

15.4%

Philadelphia

60.8

58.0

8%

7%

5.2%

Detroit

59.4

55.8

9%

8%

-1.8%

St. Louis

58.9

59.6

9%

5%

6.9%



About Zillow:
Zillow, Inc. (NASDAQ: Z) operates the largest home-related marketplaces on mobile and the Web, with a complementary portfolio of brands and products that help people find vital information about homes, and connect with the best local professionals. In addition, Zillow operates an industry-leading economics and analytics bureau led by Zillow's Chief Economist Dr. Stan Humphries. Dr. Humphries and his team of economists and data analysts produce extensive housing data and research covering more than 350 markets at Zillow Real Estate Research. Zillow also sponsors the quarterly Zillow Home Price Expectations Survey, which asks more than 100 leading economists, real estate experts and investment and market strategists to predict the path of the Zillow Home Value Index over the next five years. The Zillow, Inc. portfolio includes Zillow.com®, Zillow Mobile, Zillow Mortgage Marketplace, Zillow Rentals, Zillow Digs™, Postlets®, Diverse Solutions®, Agentfolio®, Mortech®, HotPads™ and StreetEasy®. The company is headquartered in Seattle.

Zillow.com, Zillow, Postlets, Mortech, Diverse Solutions, Agentfolio and StreetEasy are registered trademarks of Zillow, Inc. HotPads and Zillow Digs are trademarks of Zillow, Inc.

About Pulsenomics:
Pulsenomics LLC (www.pulsenomics.com) is an independent research and consulting firm that specializes in data analytics, new product and index development for institutional clients in the financial and real estate arenas. Pulsenomics also designs and manages expert surveys and consumer polls to identify trends and expectations that are relevant to effective business management and monitoring economic health. Pulsenomics LLC is the author of The Home Price Expectations Survey, The U.S. Housing Confidence Survey, and The U.S. Housing Confidence Index. Pulsenomics®, The Housing Confidence Index™, and The Housing Confidence Survey™ are trademarks of Pulsenomics LLC.

i The ZHCI is computed by Pulsenomics from data compiled by the Zillow-sponsored U.S. Housing Confidence Survey (HCS), consisting of more than 10,000 interviews with adult landline and cellphone users nationwide, collecting more than 300,000 consumer responses pertaining to the real estate market where each survey respondent lives. The headline Housing Confidence Index is comprised of three sub-indices: the Housing Market Conditions Index, measuring recent and prevailing home value trends and current buying/selling conditions; the Housing Expectations Index, which gauges expected changes in local home values, the overall affordability of homeownership and the relative value of homeownership; and the Homeownership Aspirations Index, which measures consumers' plans to buy and their attitudes toward the social value of homeownership. To view [or download] all 256 index values that comprise the ZHCI data set, or to learn more about the ZHCI calculation methodology, please visit Zillow.com/research or pulsenomics.com.
ii At least 500 HCS questionnaires are completed within each of the 20 metropolitan areas where Pulsenomics conducts this survey research. For each edition of the HCS, Pulsenomics compiles more than 300,000 response data points that are recorded within the 10,000 completed questionnaires. At a 95% confidence interval, the theoretical margin of sampling error for an aggregated, household-weighted sample of 10,000 (comprised of 20 metro-level probability samples of 500 each) is +/- 1.2%. The theoretical margin of sampling error for a probability sample of 500 drawn from a single U.S. metro area population is +/- 4.4%.
iii In 17 of 20 metros surveyed, at least 90 percent of surveyed renters who said they want to buy in the coming year indicated they were "confident" or "somewhat confident" they could afford a home. In Seattle, 82 percent indicated confidence, and in Dallas and San Francisco, 84 percent indicated confidence.
iv For purposes of this analysis, we label current renters that plan to purchase a home as "first-time" homebuyers. We acknowledge that a portion of current renters may have owned a home in the past (but this share is unknown and it is likely the majority of renters that do purchase a home in the next year will be doing so for the first time).
v http://www.census.gov/construction/nrc/
vi The inaugural U.S. Housing Confidence Survey was fielded between Jan. 6 2014 and Jan. 13 2014.

SOURCE Zillow, Inc.

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