- Austin leads the nation with 10% price drop as pandemic boomtowns cool rapidly
- Analysts predict prices will hover near zero rather than see dramatic crash like 2008
- Federal Reserve rate cut Wednesday failed to budge mortgage rates from current levels
WASHINGTON, DC (TDR) — National home prices turn negative for the first time in over two years, according to new data from Parcl Labs, signaling that the pandemic-era housing boom has officially ended. The shift comes as a softening labor market and stretched consumer finances continue weighing on buyer demand.
Prices Slip Into Negative Territory
Home values have finally dropped compared to last year, though just fractionally on a national level. The decline marks the first time prices went negative since mid-2023, when the Federal Reserve's aggressive rate hikes first shocked the market.
From March 2022 to June 2023, the average 30-year fixed mortgage rate jumped from 3.9% to over 7%. Even then, prices remained negative year-over-year for only a few months before rebounding.
"The sharp increase in mortgage rates in 2022 and 2023 created an affordability shock: buyers were priced out, sales volumes dropped, and sellers had to adjust expectations."
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Jason Lewris, co-founder of Parcl Labs, said this combination of credit constraints, weaker demand, and excess inventory typically produces broad national price declines.
Sun Belt Markets Hit Hardest
While national prices dipped less than 1%, certain markets are experiencing significant price drops. Austin, Texas leads with a 10% year-over-year decline, followed by Denver at 5%.
Tampa and Houston both saw prices fall 4%, while Atlanta and Phoenix recorded 3% decreases. These former pandemic boomtowns attracted waves of remote workers during COVID but now face a mismatch between supply and demand.
Robert Dietz, chief economist at the National Association of Home Builders, pointed to broader economic headwinds.
"We continue to see demand-side weakness as a softening labor market and stretched consumer finances are contributing to a difficult sales environment," Dietz said in a November release.
Some Markets Buck the Trend
Not every region is seeing declines. Cleveland posted a 6% price gain, while Chicago and New York City both saw prices rise 5%. Philadelphia gained 3%, and Pittsburgh and Boston each recorded 2% increases.
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The divergence reflects tight inventory conditions in the Northeast and Midwest compared to the oversupplied Sun Belt, where builders ramped up construction during the pandemic migration surge.
Outlook Remains Flat
Mortgage rates showed little reaction to Wednesday's Federal Reserve rate cut, suggesting prices are unlikely to move dramatically in either direction. Lewris offered a tempered forecast for what lies ahead.
"Our base case from here is not a deep national downturn, but a period where prices hover around zero, with small positive or small negative year-over-year changes, rather than the double-digit gains of the pandemic era," he said.
Will flat prices finally restore affordability for sidelined buyers, or does the market need a deeper correction?
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