Affordable California housing requires a huge market tumble

Dramatic change would be required to fix California’s homebuying affordability mess.

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My trusty spreadsheet compared home-price increases with income growth for 10 large California metropolitan areas using housing indexes by ICE, a mortgage-tech firm, and pay stats from the US Bureau of Economic Analysis.

First, consider the estimated median house payment for these California metros.

In 2018, payments on the typical $509,400 home purchase ran $2,020 monthly with an average 4.3% mortgage rate, assuming a 20% downpayment.

That was 22% of a typical house hunter’s $109,100 income, including two earners.

Then, contemplate the payment on today’s $759,500 median-priced home. The payment doubled to $4,000 monthly with 6.9% rates.

The mortgage now gobbles up 32% of the $148,500 income that risen 36% in six years.

So, what would it take to return this payment burden to pre-coronavirus levels?

Rates would have to fall to 3.5%. Incomes would need to surge 50%. And prices would need to drop 33%. Or some combination of the three.

This lack of affordability is why one-third fewer California homes will be sold this year than in 2018.

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How did we get here?

Remember that the housing market was upended by several things during the pandemic: a demand for more living space, mortgage rates under 3% and stimulus checks boosting incomes.

Now let’s look at how six years of home appreciation through October contrasts with rising per-capita incomes during the six years ending in 2023.

In eight of these 10 California metros, home-price gains outpaced incomes. Here’s how they ranked by the gap …

Bakersfield: 63% gains in home values compared with 29% income growth.

Inland Empire: 65% home gain vs. 37% income growth.

San Diego: 66% home gain vs. 39% income growth.

Fresno: 60% home gain vs. 33% income growth.

Ventura County: 51% home gain vs. 36% income growth.

LA-OC: 50% home gain vs. 39% income growth.

Sacramento: 46% home gain vs. 35% income growth.

Stockton: 50% home gain vs. 45% income growth.

And in two California metros, incomes beat home prices …

San Jose: 34% home gains topped by 54% income growth.

San Francisco: 26% home gains topped by 46% income growth.

Sliver of hope

For homebuyers, a little bit of good news: appreciation is cooling.

Price gains in the 12 months ending in October were significantly smaller than the previous five-year appreciation pace in all but one of the 10 metros.

San Diego saw the biggest chill, with prices rising 3.2% in the past year – down from annual average gains of 9.9% between 2018 and 2023. That is a 6.7-percentage-point cooldown.

San Jose was the lone spot without a dip in appreciation. Its 5.1% year’s gain was a smidgen above the 5% yearly increases of 2018-23.

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Here’s how the nine other metros fared by ICE math, ranked by appreciation chill …

Inland Empire: 3.5% year’s gain vs. averaging 9.8% annual increases in 2018-23 – 6.3 points cooler.

Sacramento: 1.7% year’s gain vs. 7.5% annually in 2018-23 – 5.8 points cooler.

Bakersfield: 4.1% year’s gain vs. up 9.4% annually in 2018-23 – 5.3 points cooler.

Stockton: 2.9% year’s gain vs. up 7.9% annually in 2018-23 – 5 points cooler.

Ventura County: 3.3% year’s gain vs. up 7.9% yearly in 2018-23 – 4.7 points cooler.

Fresno: 4.2% year’s gain vs. up 8.9% annually in 2018-23 – 4.7 points cooler.

Los Angeles-Orange County: 3.9% year’s gain vs. up 7.7% annually in 2018-23 – 3.7 points cooler.

San Francisco: 1.3% year’s gain vs. up 4.4% annually in 2018-23 – 3.1 points cooler.

But smaller home price gains are by no means a cure, because “affordability” really means lowering prices.

Jonathan Lansner is the business columnist for the Southern California News Group. He can be reached at jlansner@scng.com

 

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