Here’s when US home price declines could end: Goldman Sachs

The ongoing plunge in US home prices may be nearing its end, Goldman Sachs analysts said in a note to clients this week.

Long-term mortgage rates have cooled by nearly a full percentage point after surging above 7% as the Federal Reserve enacted a series of interest rate hikes last year. The trend should improve housing affordability and cause price declines to reach a floor, according to the Wall Street Bank.

“The sharpest declines in the US housing market are now behind us,” Goldman analysts Ronnie Walker and Vinay Viswanathan said in a client note released on Monday.

The strategists added that they “expect a peak-to-trough decline in national home prices of roughly 6% and for prices to stop declining around mid-year.”

Overheated housing markets on the West Coast and in the Southwest will likely experience “larger declines” in home prices compared to the national rate due to a glut in inventory, the note said. Meanwhile, markets located in the Mid-Atlantic and Midwest regions will see “more most declines.”


San Diego homes
San Diego is one of the US cities expected to experience the worst price declines.
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The surge in mortgage rates has caused a major correction in the US housing market in recent months, sending prospective buyers to the sidelines and causing sellers to rethink their plans or slash their asking prices to lure interest.

Other firms, including Pantheon Macroeconomics, project larger declines in home prices before a floor is reached. In December, Pantheon’s Ian Shepherdson said prices could fall by up to 20% during a multi-year market correction.

Goldman noted some promising recent trends in the market. After plunging to a 25-year low last year, mortgage purchases applications have up by an average of 9% compared to their trough in October.


Home for sale
Goldman Sachs expects price declines to end by mid-year.
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“We suspect that existing home sales could decline slightly further but will likely bottom in Q1,” the analysts wrote.

Still, homeowners in many markets — especially so-called “pandemic boomtowns” that benefitted from relaxed fiscal policy during the COVID-19 crisis — can expect more financial pain before a bottom is reached.

As The Post reported, Goldman Sachs predicted earlier this month that four cities — San Jose, California; Austin, Texas; Phoenix, Arizona; and San Diego, California — will see price declines of 25% from recent highs. Those declines would be on par from the collapse experienced during the 2008 housing crash.


Home for sale
Goldman noted a recent cooling in mortgage rates.
Bloomberg via Getty Images

“This [national] decline should be small enough as to avoid broad mortgage credit stress, with a sharp increase in foreclosures nationwide seeming unlikely,” the bank said.

“That said, overheated housing markets in the Southwest and Pacific coast, such as San Jose MSA, Austin MSA, Phoenix MSA, and San Diego MSA will likely grapple with peak-to-trough declines of over 25%, presenting localized risk of higher delinquencies for mortgages originated in 2022 or late 2021.”