Matthew Gardner, chief economist at Gardner Economics, joined Anne Hartnett of Agent Publishing to dissect the first quarter of 2026’s housing market. The discussion highlighted the significant impact of global events, such as geopolitical tensions and energy price shocks, on mortgage rates and overall market dynamics. Despite underlying housing-specific issues like supply shortages, broader economic forces are currently dictating the market’s pace.
Key Takeaways
- Geopolitical events, particularly the conflict in Iran, have driven up energy prices, fueling inflation and consequently increasing bond yields and mortgage rates.
- Tariffs continue to impact the cost of building materials, affecting new construction.
- The housing market faces a "supply shortage" exacerbated by the "lock-in effect," where existing homeowners with low mortgage rates are hesitant to sell.
- Affordability remains a structural barrier, particularly for younger buyers, while consumer confidence is a behavioral barrier affecting hesitant buyers.
- The National Association of Realtors (NAR) has revised its sales outlook downwards significantly, reflecting the current market sluggishness.
Macroeconomic Headwinds Impacting Housing
Gardner explained that external factors like geopolitics and energy prices transmit directly to the housing market through inflation and bond yields, which influence mortgage rates. The crude oil price surge to $115 a barrel following an attack on Iranian energy infrastructure has neutralized the earlier downward trend in inflation. This has led bond investors to demand higher yields, pushing the 10-Year Treasury yield, a benchmark for mortgage rates, to a high of 4.34%.
Furthermore, tariffs continue to inflate the prices of raw materials, impacting the new construction market. These macro forces are landing on a housing market already grappling with subdued activity and a persistent supply shortage, despite high listing activity year-on-year. The "lock-in effect" is a significant factor, preventing many homeowners with lower mortgage rates from selling.
The Interplay of Global Uncertainty and Domestic Policy
The current mortgage rate environment is a complex entanglement of global uncertainty and domestic policy. While the Federal Reserve has maintained a cautious stance on short-term rates, higher yields persist due to inflation concerns and global instability. Historically, global uncertainty drives investors towards the security of treasuries, which should lower mortgage rates. However, current oil price worries about inflation are causing bonds to react negatively, leading to unexpected mortgage rate increases.
Key indicators to watch include monthly inflation data (CPI and PCE), the 10-Year Treasury yield, particularly around auction dates, and oil prices. The actions of central banks, including potential shifts in Fed leadership, also play a crucial role. Gardner emphasized that global uncertainty and domestic policy are not competing but reinforcing factors, creating a "stickier" rate environment.
Sticky Inflation and Its Constraints on the Fed
Sticky inflation presents a unique challenge for the Federal Reserve. Unlike typical demand-driven inflation, the current supply-side shocks create a difficult scenario where cutting rates could exacerbate inflation, while holding rates steady or raising them could deepen an economic slowdown. The market’s expectation for Fed rate cuts has dwindled from two to potentially zero.
This uncertainty, more than the rate level itself, is hindering housing demand. While rate stability could be a positive, volatile rates in a high-inflation environment make underwriting purchases difficult, leading buyers to hesitate. For most buyers, purchasing a home is the largest financial decision they will make, and uncertainty leads to inaction.
Affordability vs. Consumer Confidence
Both affordability and consumer confidence are significantly impacting the housing market, but they affect different demographics. Affordability is a structural barrier, a mathematical constraint that disqualifies buyers. Consumer confidence is a behavioral barrier, causing qualified buyers to hesitate.
While incomes are rising, making affordability slightly better, younger buyers like Gen-Z face constraints from student loan debt. Millennials are weighing buying versus renting, while Gen X and Boomers, often with lower mortgage rates or wealth, are reluctant to move. Confidence is also low, as buyers perceive no urgency to act due to softening prices and increased inventory, conveying a message of "there’s time."
Guidance for Real Estate Professionals
Real estate professionals are advised to lead conversations with their clients’ timelines, not the market’s. Grounding discussions in the client’s life events and needs, rather than market fluctuations, provides a stable foundation. Explaining market dynamics clearly, such as why mortgage rates track the 10-Year Treasury yield and not the Fed funds rate, positions agents as informed advisors rather than reactive commentators.
Key points to convey include the enduring "lock-in effect" constraining inventory, the relative stability of home prices, and the long-term favorability of ownership over renting in many markets. Providing a framework rather than a forecast is crucial for building client confidence.
Revised Sales Outlook
The National Association of Realtors (NAR) has significantly revised its sales outlook from a projected 14% rebound to just 4% growth for 2026. This revision reflects sluggish sales, lower consumer confidence, and softer job growth. The original optimistic forecast was based on assumptions of easing mortgage rates, more job gains, and market stability, none of which materialized. Geopolitical tensions, particularly the conflict with Iran, have further hampered the spring selling season. While inventory is improving slightly, it remains below normal levels, and without more willing buyers, homes are likely to sit longer. Home prices, however, have shown year-on-year increases for 33 consecutive months, indicating sellers are not capitulating. The revised outlook suggests the second half of the year will need to drive most of the growth, requiring either a meaningful rate decline or a recovery in confidence, or both.
