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Widespread homeowner reluctance to give up low mortgage rates is the main cause of critically low housing inventory. This lack of supply, not strong demand, is the primary reason home prices remain at record highs, preventing a market correction despite low sales volume.

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While falling mortgage rates will improve affordability, the "lock-in effect" for existing homeowners with ultra-low rates will persist. This will suppress the typical sales volume rebound, leading to an anemic 3% growth in purchase volumes, a historically tepid response to improved affordability conditions.

Existing homeowners have resisted price cuts due to low mortgage rates, but they will eventually face the same market realities builders are addressing now. This delayed "price discovery" is expected to cause a 1-2% nationwide decline in resale home prices in 2026.

The gridlock in the American housing market is driven significantly by a psychological factor: homeowners' unwillingness to sell at a loss. This 'loss aversion' keeps prices artificially high while causing the volume of sales to plummet to a three-decade low, a trend often overlooked in standard economic analysis.

High home prices should not be interpreted as a sign of a healthy market. Instead, they indicate a system that is malfunctioning as designed, where artificial scarcity created by policy and corporate buying drives prices up. This reflects a structural failure, not robust economic demand.

The historically low number of home sales isn't just about buyer affordability. A major factor is seller reluctance; existing homeowners are "locked in" by their low-rate mortgages and find it financially unattractive to sell and buy a new property at current higher rates.

While lower mortgage rates typically boost buyer demand, they also reduce the 'lock-in effect' for existing homeowners. This brings more supply to the market, which will likely offset the increased demand and keep home price growth minimal and 'range-bound'.

The US housing market is frozen not by insolvency but because homeowners are locked into low mortgage rates. With transactions at crisis-era lows but driven by non-discretionary events like death and divorce, pent-up demand creates a "coiled spring" scenario for when rates ease.

A major driver of today's housing scarcity is that homeowners, particularly Boomers, who refinanced into sub-3% mortgages have no financial incentive to ever sell. This seemingly positive economic condition has had the negative side effect of locking vast amounts of housing inventory in place, worsening the supply crisis.

The apparent spike in median home prices is a statistical artifact. Owners with ultra-low mortgage rates are not selling, so transactions are skewed toward higher-priced homes, artificially raising the median. This obscures significant pent-up demand that could be unleashed if rates fall.

The gap between existing mortgage rates (under 4.25%) and new rates (over 6.25%) is over 200 basis points. This spread, which disincentivizes homeowners from selling, has persisted for three consecutive years. Historically, the gap only exceeded 100 basis points for a total of eight quarters over the past four decades, making the current situation a major anomaly.