18-Sep-16 – Spurred on by historically low mortgage rates and a recovering job market, the Chicago housing market remains active as the end of the third quarter approaches, experts say. Freddie Mac’s Primary Mortgage Market Survey reported that benchmark 30-year mortgage rates have ranged between 3.41 and 3.48 percent nationwide for ten consecutive weeks. A year ago at this time, 30-year fixed loans averaged 3.90 percent.
“Many homeowners are taking advantage of the historically low rates by refinancing,” Becketti said. “Since the Brexit vote, the refinance share of mortgage activity has remained above 60 percent.”
Despite rock-bottom loan interest rates, first-time home buyers and Millennials are not entering the housing market en masse in 2016, analysts say. Once close to 70 percent, the nation’s homeownership rate matched a record low 62.9 percent in the second quarter of 2016, while apartment occupancy hit a ten-year peak.
While existing home prices continue to rise, sales have slowed because of limited home inventory. Chicago posted an 11.9 percent year-over-year home sales decrease in July 2016 with 2,714 sales, down from 3,082 in July 2015, Illinois REALTORS reported. However, the median price of a home in Chicago rose to $290,000 in July, up 1.8 percent compared with July 2015. In the nine-county Chicago area, home and condominium sales in July totaled 11,716 units, down 7.3 percent from July 2015. The median price was $238,000 in July in the Chicago area, an increase of 5.8 percent from July 2015.
A new report by real estate analysts Marcus & Millichap noted that steady job creation over the last six years has supported apartment demand, pushing occupied units to an all-time high in the second quarter. “Newly formed households have favored renting rather than homeownership throughout the growth cycle, reflecting lifestyle changes and barriers to homeownership,” noted the Marcus & Millichap study.
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