Redfin’s latest housing report points to a market moving in the wrong direction for buyers.
Home shoppers were itching for plentiful listings and fading sales momentum to cool prices.
However, Redfin’s June 11 update showed the opposite.
Home prices pushed to a new record even as buyer activity continued to lose steam.
On top of that, mortgage rates remain high, monthly payments are still near recent highs, and sellers are not cutting deeply enough to restore affordability.
Additionally, the Fed backdrop adds to the pressure, with rate-cut hopes fading amid sticky inflation.
Buyers are stepping back, but the cost of buying continues moving higher.
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What Redfin said about the housing market
Redfin’s latest report pointed to a housing market that is cooling in one place but still getting pricier in another.
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The median U.S. home-sale price hit a record $400,894 during the four weeks ending June 7, up 1.5% from a year earlier.
That pushed the typical existing home above $400,000 for the first time.
At the same time, pending home sales fell 0.6% from the previous week, marking the fourth straight weekly decline.
So the dichotomy here is that even though buyers are stepping back, prices are not breaking lower.
Redfin said monthly payments remain historically high, with the typical payment at $2,619, just $8 below an 11-month high.
Mortgage rates in the mid-6% range are keeping pressure on affordability, while economic uncertainty, inflation concerns, geopolitical turmoil, and the possibility of a Fed rate hike are also making prospective buyers nervous.
The big surprise, though, is that Redfin said supply is still tight enough to keep prices propped up as some would-be sellers are leaving the market, while demand has also slowed.
Related: Fannie Mae predicts mortgage rate change
However, it isn’t enough to create a national price reset.
“Crossing the $400,000 threshold is a reminder of how difficult it is to break into homeownership for many Americans, and rising prices of other things is making it even harder,” said Chen Zhao, Redfin’s head of economics research.
Price growth is cooling, and homes are not rising as aggressively as they were last year. Redfin also says high buying costs pushed many buyers out of the market, giving remaining buyers some room to negotiate.
That means affordability remains painful, but buyers in markets like Nashville and Austin may have more leverage to negotiate concessions and better terms.
Key numbers behind Redfin’s housing-market warning
- Record price threshold: The median U.S. home-sale price hit $400,894, showing affordability is still worsening for buyers.
- Prices still rising: Home prices increased 1.5% year over year, suggesting tight supply is keeping prices elevated.
- Monthly payment squeeze: The typical mortgage payment reached $2,619, keeping many buyers under pressure.
- Mortgage-rate pressure: The 30-year fixed rate hit 6.67%, cutting into purchasing power.
- Demand keeps weakening: Pending sales fell for a fourth straight week, signaling buyers are pulling back.
Source: Redfin Data.
Why the Fed backdrop makes Redfin’s report worse for buyers
Redfin’s report lands at a precarious moment for buyers as the broader rate backdrop isn’t moving in their favor.
For much of the year, many home shoppers had been waiting for the Federal Reserve to begin cutting interest rates, hoping that lower borrowing costs would eventually pull down mortgage rates.
That relief has become harder to count on.
The broader consensus expects the Fed to hold rates steady at its next meeting, and rate-cut expectations for the rest of the year have faded as inflation remains sticky.
For context, according to the BLS, consumer prices rose 4.2% in May from a year earlier, while core inflation was still running at 2.9%, and gasoline prices were up 40.5% year over year.
Naturally, that pushes Wall Street further away from a quick rate-cut story.
In fact, Goldman Sachs moved its next Fed cut forecast into 2027, after stronger jobs data and persistent inflation made a 2026 cut harder to justify.
That feeds into the discussion of mortgage rates that usually don’t move on just housing data. In fact, they are tied to the broader bond market, especially Treasury yields, which have stayed elevated as investors price in strong jobs data, persistent inflation, and less room for the Fed to ease policy.
The contrast is painful for buyers.
Housing demand is weakening, but the cost of financing a home is still high.
Normally, softer demand would give buyers more leverage and put pressure on prices. Instead, Redfin’s report shows home prices hitting a new record while pending sales lose momentum.
So buyers are essentially caught between a rock and a hard place.
Prices have not fallen enough to restore affordability, and mortgage rates are not easing enough to offset high prices.
We will see how much relief buyers can realistically expect when Fed Chair Kevin Warsh leads his first policy meeting this week on June 17, according to Investopedia.
So as long as inflation keeps rate cuts on hold, Redfin’s warning becomes impossible to ignore at this juncture.
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