Homeownership
Increasingly Difficult For Average Americans
by Reuters
MARCH 24, 2016, 12:54 AM EDT
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Home price
growth is exceeding growth in wages.
(Reuters) –
Home prices are rising faster than wages in most of the United States, making
homeownership increasingly difficult for average Americans in some of the most
populous areas of the country, according to a report released on Thursday.
The report
found that home price growth exceeded wage growth in nearly two thirds of the
nation’s housing markets so far this year, with urban centers like San
Francisco and New York City among the least affordable.
Home prices
in 9% of the U.S. housing market are now less affordable than their historic
norms, the report by RealtyTrac found. Home buyers need to spend more of their
incomes on housing, leaving less money for other purchases.
“While the
vast majority of housing markets are still affordable by their own historic
standards, home prices are floating out of reach for average wage earners in a
growing number of U.S. housing markets,” said Daren Blomquist, senior vice
president at RealtyTrac, which monitors housing market trends.
RealtyTrac
parsed homes sales and income data in 456 U.S. counties with a combined population
of 221 million.
The report
comes after data showing house flipping, buying and selling a house to make a
quick profit in a hot housing market, had risen to record levels in some
markets, generating concerns of a price bubble.
While the
latest report could fuel those concerns, prices are still far more affordable
than during the peak of the housing bubble in 2006. In the first quarter of
this year the average wage earner needed to spend a third of their income on
monthly mortgage payments compared to more than half in 2006.
In addition,
RealtyTrac’s affordability measure, which compares house prices to wages, was
above historic norms in 99% of housing markets in 2006. After the housing
bubble burst that fell to a low of 2% in 2012 before rising to its current 9%.
Still,
prices in highly sought after housing markets leave average wage earners far
behind, RealtyTrac said.For example, to buy a median priced home in various
areas of New York City, Brooklyn and Manhattan especially, or in the San
Francisco metro area, a buyer needs to spend between 120% and 95% of the
average wage on mortgage payments.
Among
populous areas where the growth in house prices outstripped wage growth were
Los Angeles, Phoenix, and San Diego.
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