The economic shock hitting the housing market is starting to do some damage

The message from the Federal Reserve is pretty clear: The central bank is done sitting on the sidelines as inflation eats away at Americans’ buying power. To be successful, of course, the bank will need to rein in one of the biggest drivers of runaway inflation: the red-hot U.S. housing market.

On that front, the Fed might be having some success: There's mounting evidence that the economic shock caused by spiking mortgage rates is beginning to take some steam out of the housing market.

"We saw a clear shift in the housing market as rates rose to 5% at the end of March," Devyn Bachman, vice president of research at John Burns Real Estate Consulting, told Fortune. "We are hearing about qualification issues, rising cancellations, and increased buyer hesitancy, particularly at entry-level price points and in remote locations."

When you look at the data, there are some early signs of cooling. Since housing inventory bottomed out in mid-March, it has posted three consecutive weekly increases on Zillow.com. Additionally, Redfin says it's seeing an increase in the share of sellers reducing their prices on its site, and evidence that demand for second homes is dropping.

"Some of the new-home market's directional indicators are showing softening…fewer builders [are] raising prices from one month to the next, and sales expectations for the next six months [are] dipping," Bachman says.

Let's be clear: What we're seeing, as of now, appears to be slowing in the rate of growth—not a market correction. We're still amid one of the hottest stretches in recorded history for the U.S. housing market. Bidding wars are rampant. Inventory remains scant. And sellers have, well, pretty much all the power.

The reason more homebuyers are suddenly pushing back at record home prices is pretty straightforward: Soaring mortgage rates are pricing many of them out of the market. Back in December, the average 30-year fixed mortgage rate was 3.11%. Now many mortgage brokers are quoting borrowers at 5%. That's a bigger deal than it might first appear. At a 3.11% rate, a borrower would owe $1,710 per month on a $400,000 mortgage. But if a borrower got that loan at a 5% rate, that payment would spike to $2,147. In total, that would add up to an additional $157,337 over the course of the 30-year mortgage.

As a result of the spike in rates, active home shoppers are in a market that is beginning to resemble facets of the 2000s housing boom. Black Knight, a mortgage technology and data provider, estimates the typical U.S. family would have to spend 29% of their income to make a mortgage payment on the average-price American home. That's up from 24% in December. It also marks the highest level the metric has hit since 2007.

But industry insiders still don't think we're headed for a correction. Indeed, not a single major real estate firm is predicting that home prices will fall over the coming year. Zillow forecasts that the rate of year-over-year home price growth will come in at 17.8% in February 2023. Meanwhile, CoreLogic says it will come in at 5%. Either scenario would mark a deceleration from the 19.2% year-over-year jump posted over the past 12 months.

"My short answer is that unlike the housing bubble and crash of mid 2000s, the recent increase seems to be sustained by the substantive supply and demand issues I have detailed—not by excessive leverage, looser underwriting standards, or financial speculation," Fed governor Christopher Waller told a conference audience in late March. "I am hopeful that at least some of the pandemic-specific factors pushing up home prices and rents could begin to ease in the next year or so."

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

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