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There are three paths to better housing affordability: falling prices, lower interest rates, or rising incomes. The forecast suggests the most probable path is for home prices to flatten while incomes continue to grow, gradually restoring affordability without a damaging price crash.
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.
As mortgage rates fall, more homeowners will list their properties, increasing inventory. This rise in supply will happen concurrently with the rise in demand from improved affordability. This dynamic will prevent a surge in home prices, keeping annual appreciation capped at a modest 2% for the upcoming year.
The most effective way to lower housing prices is to increase supply. Instead of artificially freezing rents, which discourages investment, policymakers should remove regulations that make building new units difficult. More construction creates more competition, which naturally drives down prices for everyone.
Meaningful affordability cannot be achieved with superficial fixes. It requires long-term, structural solutions: building 5-10 million more homes to address housing costs (40% of CPI), implementing universal healthcare to lower medical expenses, expanding public higher education, and aggressive antitrust enforcement to foster competition.
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.
Despite housing affordability reaching its best level since Q2 2022, buyer demand has not yet responded. This is a normal market behavior, as historical data shows it takes about a year for improvements in affordability to translate into a noticeable increase in home purchase transactions.
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'.
A sustainable recovery in housing activity requires a roughly 10% improvement in affordability. Morgan Stanley calculates this threshold will be met when mortgage rates fall to approximately 5.5%, a specific target needed to meaningfully "unstick" the market from its current low-activity state.
A significant housing market recovery requires a substantial and sustained improvement in affordability. Analysts estimate a 100-basis-point drop in mortgage rates (e.g., to 5.5%) is needed to trigger a meaningful pickup in sales. However, this growth is not immediate; sustainable increases in sales volumes typically materialize a full year after the affordability improvement occurs.
The core of the affordability crisis plaguing American families is a national shortage of 3-4 million housing units, particularly for middle-income workers and first-time buyers. This is not just a collection of local zoning issues but a macroeconomic problem that directly impacts consumer sentiment and economic well-being.