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‘Huge disconnect between buyers and sellers’ says Fannie Mae CEO during stop in San Diego – Hartford Courant

‘Huge disconnect between buyers and sellers’ says Fannie Mae CEO during stop in San Diego – Hartford Courant

The head of Fannie Mae said Friday at a conference in downtown San Diego that potential homeowners are lacking enthusiasm compared to sellers.

Priscilla Almodovar, CEO of Fannie Mae, spoke to roughly 500 people Friday morning in the Harbor Ballroom of the Manchester Grand Hyatt. She was there as part of the annual L’Attitude conference, a Latino-themed business event.

“Right now, there is a huge disconnect between buyers and sellers,” Almodovar said. “When we ask buyers how they feel about buying a home, it’s at all-time lows. Sellers, on the other hand, think it’s a great time to sell a home.”

Almodovar said even with mortgage rates lowering and more homes on the market, they are not seeing a significant rise in sales. She stopped short of actually suggesting sellers lower prices, or predicting home prices will drop. However, Almodovar did predict a sluggish sales market.

“Last year was an all-time low for sales, and we think this year we will see a similar trajectory,” she said.

In 2023, there were 26,910 home sales in San Diego County, the lowest in records dating to 1988. The only years that came close to that level were 31,268 home sales in 1995 and 34,294 in 2008.

Fannie Mae is a government-sponsored agency that is publicly traded. Formed by Congress in 1938, its purpose is to secure government-backed mortgages to moderate- to low-income home purchasers. It has $4.3 trillion in assets, making it the fifth-largest company in the world by assets, according to Fortune.

Almodovar was on stage with Gary Acosta, CEO of the National Association of Hispanic Real Estate Professionals. Both speakers said prices and other ways Fannie Mae was working to establish credit history for low-income buyers might not be as impactful because of a nationwide for-sale housing shortage.

“Ultimately, building is a local issue. Zoning, building codes, land, all of that has to be aligned,” she said. “It’s all levels of government working together, it’s finance working together, and builders, who have to be part of the conversation. The numbers have to make sense for them.”

Almodovar said it probably wouldn’t be until the latter part of 2025 until mortgage rates fall below 6 percent. As of Friday morning, the average interest rate was 6.14 percent for a 30-year, fixed-rate loan, said Mortgage News Daily.

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