With ambiguity surrounding the length of the COVID-19 outbreak and damage it will cause, consumers are becoming diffident in taking out a mortgage for a major purchase, according to Zillow.
While the current low interest rate environment would normally catalyze a sweltering start to home buying season, early signs show a slowing housing market due to financial insecurity during the pandemic.

Average rates for 30-year mortgages stayed below 3.5% for all of February and the first half of March, including an all-time nadir of 3.29% on March 5, based on Freddie Mac's weekly releases. It produced a tidal wave of refinances towering nearly 500% higher than the same time year-over-year. However, the latest application survey from the Mortgage Bankers Association showed a 30% drop in volume from the week before.
"The U.S. housing market has entered truly uncharted territory, shaken by the COVID-19 pandemic and a corresponding, sharp economic contraction that has already caused millions of Americans to lose their jobs," Zillow economist Jeff Tucker said in a press release.
The company's bank tellers, call-center workers and support staff are part of the roughly 70% of American workers who don’t have the ability to work from home.
Sales of previously owned homes surged in February to the fastest pace in 13 years, highlighting a flurry of activity in the housing market before the economic repercussions of the coronavirus.
More than 245,000 people were registered for the June exam as part of the three-level program to earn a credential from the most challenging test in finance.
"Rock-bottom mortgage rates have provided some small financial relief for homeowners and buyers, but it hasn't been enough to avoid a slowdown. The big question at the moment is to what degree measures being taken by local, state and national legislators will help limit the number of foreclosures in the months ahead."
New-home sales stayed robust in February, hovering near 13-year highs. But that was prior to the impacts of the coronavirus and quarantine orders we see today. With potential buyers more likely to wait out the crisis despite low rates, purchase volumes and overall mortgage activity could plummet in the coming months until the health of people and the economy point back up.


