A home for sale in Denver

Denver First-Time Home Buyers Hit With Both Increasing Mortgage Rates And Home Prices

Pent-up demand for housing is being frustrated with low inventories of homes for sale, high home prices, and soaring mortgage rates. New home buyers see housing as increasingly unaffordable.

Mortgage rates have literally exploded across the country in the past 6 months, according to Dr Cash Home Buyers, a home buyer company based in the Denver metro area. They have seen mortgage rate increases in the past but nothing of this magnitude. Virtually every major city in the country is experiencing the same problem of housing affordability. This has created a situation where numerous potential home buyers in Denver can no longer afford to buy a home and they are back in the rental market.

Badly Damaged House

What Are Interest Rates Right Now For Mortgages?

In early April the average rate on a 30-year fixed mortgage was 5.10% according to Bankrate.com. A shorter 15-year fixed mortgage has an average rate of 4.22%. A jumbo mortgage is a larger loan for properties priced at $500,000 or more. Currently, a 30-year jumbo mortgage has an average rate of 5.03%.

Why Are Mortgage Rates Rising?

The Federal Reserve raised its benchmark interest rate for the first time since 2018. This was done in an effort to reduce the rate of inflation in the country.  The Federal Reserve has indicated that it will probably raise the benchmark interest rate a few more times in 2022.

The soaring rise in mortgage rates coincides with two other factors that are pricing first time Denver home buyers out of the market. These factors are a low inventory of homes for sale and dramatic increases in home prices. The combination of all three factors has made home buying a difficult and more expensive process. Every professional home buyer company in Denver is also facing fewer and fewer opportunities.

A Denver area home that needs extensive remodeling in the interior

 

How Are Higher Mortgage Interest Rates Affecting Monthly Mortgage Payments?

There are two primary impacts when mortgage interest rates increase. First, higher interest rates translate into higher monthly mortgage payments. Second, higher interest rates will reduce the amount a home buyer can borrow because of the lender guidelines that limit how much income can be devoted to housing costs. Below are two simple examples of the increase in monthly mortgage payments with a 2% increase in the interest rate.

If a $300,000 house is purchased with a 10% down payment and a 4% mortgage for 30 years then the monthly principal and interest payment would be $1289. If the mortgage rate rises to 6% then the monthly payment would be $1618, an increase of $329 every month.

If a $400,000 house is purchased with a 10% down payment and a 4% mortgage for 30 years then the monthly principal and interest payment would be $1718. If the mortgage rate rises to 6% then the monthly payment would be $2158, an increase of $440 every month.

Is There An Affordability Crisis In Denver Housing?

Yes. As housing prices increase along with the cost of borrowing money to buy houses the result will be fewer people able to afford to buy a home.  In addition, the nation’s home builders have been unable to close the gap between the demand and supply for houses. It will require years, perhaps a decade or more, for housing supply to catch up with demand. Therefore first time home buyers in Denver will remain renters for a longer period of time and some may never be able to purchase a house.

Dr Cash Home Buyers will continue to purchase all types of residential housing and repair and upgrade them to current standards. They will do their best to maintain the housing supply in Denver.