One
night last spring, David Hall returned home to his studio apartment outside
Boston to learn that his monthly rent had spiked from $725 to $995.
‘It
is now cheaper to buy a home than it is to rent in virtually every major city
in the United States’
It
would be much cheaper for the maintenance manager to buy a nearby starter house
than to stay put. But his mortgage broker told him that while his credit score
was good, it was not high enough to meet banks’ tough standards, he said.
“I
know if I walk into a bank, they are just going to laugh at me,” Hall says. “So
I’m stuck.”
He
is not alone.
Five
years after the housing bubble burst, the United States is in the midst of a
housing affordability crisis. Home prices have fallen a third from their peaks,
but many Americans cannot benefit because they cannot get a mortgage.
With
credit tight, many consumers have no choice but to rent. Others who can afford
to buy are also renting, because they view real estate as a lousy investment.
With this increased demand, rents in some cities have jumped by double-digit
percentage rates.
In
the 12 months ended in May, rents rose 14 percent in San Francisco and 11
percent in San Jose, California, according to real estate data provider Zillow.
Last year in Minneapolis, they spiked 11 percent even as home values sank 8
percent.
People
with lower incomes have long struggled to find affordable housing, but many in
the middle class are now hurting, too.
Most
personal finance experts recommend allocating no more of 30% of family income
to housing, but nearly 40% of Americans are paying more than a third, according
to the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey.
In
New York City, one-third of households are spending more than half their pay on
rent.
“We
have falling incomes, rising rents and nothing but substantial upward pressure
on those rents,” says Chris Herbert, director of Harvard University’s Joint
Center for Housing Studies. “And nothing in the cards suggests it will turn
around anytime soon.”
‘It
is now cheaper to buy a home than it is to rent in virtually every major city
in the United States’
Today’s
housing market is a buyer’s paradise.
It
is now cheaper to buy a home than it is to rent in virtually every major city
in the United States, according to John Burns Real Estate Consulting.
But
for many in the renter class, buying even a modest home is impossible because
financing is so hard to secure.
Lending
for home purchases hit a 12-year low of $404 billion last year, down from $1.4
trillion in 2006, according to trade publication Inside Mortgage Finance. That
means mortgage credit is tighter than it was even before the housing boom.
This
year, lending is expected to drop even more, according to Inside Mortgage
Finance.
A
recent Morgan Stanley research report states that the average credit score is
762 for a consumer securing a mortgage backed by government-sponsored
enterprises like Fannie Mae. But 65 percent of Americans have scores below 750.
In
other words, a disproportionate number of mortgages are going to people with
unusually good credit. A perfect score is 850, and anything below 660 is
considered subprime.
“Basically,
access to credit for borrowers with less than spotless credit is severely
limited,” the Morgan Stanley report states. “A good chunk” of U.S. households
are “cut off from mortgage credit on this count alone.”
For
people who can get mortgages, rates are at their lowest levels in several
generations. Add that to the cheap home prices, and houses are at their most
affordable since at least 1970, when the National Association of Realtors began
tracking this metric.
Normally,
high affordability translates into higher sales. And the housing market is
showing some signs of recovery – the S&P/Case Shiller index of home prices
had its third consecutive monthly gain in April. Last week, the NAR said
pending home sales had matched a two-year high in May.
But
any recovery has been tepid. The NAR said existing home sales had declined 1.5%
to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.55 million in May from 4.62 million
in April. That is 34.2 percent above the July 2010 bottom of 3.39 million, but
far short of the 5.5 million pace that the NAR considers healthy.
“Home
sales have just barely picked up from their cyclical lows, and that’s because
there are still constraints to borrowing,” said Moody’s Analytics economist
Celia Chen.
Part
of the lender pullback has to do with the stringent regulations Washington put
in place after the housing crash, says Michael Fratantoni, vice president of
the Mortgage Bankers Association. These rules put more of the losses from bad
mortgages onto lenders, instead of investors or government-sponsored
enterprises.
Then
there is the climate of unstable home prices and a shaky labor market: “There’s
a risk that even a borrower with moderately good credit may fall behind,”
Fratantoni says.
Consumers
who cannot buy must rent, and that is where many Americans are feeling the pressure.
A rent index from Zillow shows year-over-year gains for 70% of the U.S.
metropolitan areas, while its home value index rose in only 7.3%.
Only
a few years ago, landlords in cities like San Francisco and New York were
tossing in a month or two of free rent, sometimes with parking, to lure tenants
into signing leases.
Today,
applicants are showing up at apartment viewings with copies of their
unblemished credit reports and letters of recommendation from bosses and
prominent friends, in the hopes of snatching up a place to rent.
Equity
Residential, one of the biggest apartment owners in the United States, has more
renters with high credit scores than ever, vice-president of Operations David
Santee said on an April conference call with analysts.
Demand
for apartments is also higher because many potential buyers in their 20s and
30s want to stay flexible – home ownership is not as attractive as it was to
earlier generations.
Still,
plenty of people would prefer entry into the ownership class.
Last
spring Rosemary Wynder, a physician order specialist, found her rent shooting
up. She decided to buy a house.
But
a bank glitch in February had caused one late car loan payment, dinging her
credit score. The Utica, New York, resident has been unable to straighten out
the mistake, and five banks have rejected her for a mortgage. “I’ve
been crying,” says Wynder. “I’ve been praying.”
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