Housing Tennessee report: State ‘Saw Robust to Mixed Economic Outcomes’

Home prices still rising, but construction permits show significant decrease

Housing TN Q2 2022
This dashboard shows the year-over-year changes in several categories tracked by the Housing Tennessee Report. (Courtesy of the Business and Economic Research Center at MTSU)

Middle Tennessee State University’s latest “Housing Tennessee” report shows “mixed economic outcomes” for a housing market that remains strong but showed signs of cooling in the second quarter of the year.

The MTSU Business and Economic Research Center’s statewide report for the second quarter of 2022 shows challenges regarding total and single-family home permits as well as rental vacancy rates and foreclosure rates, noted report author Murat Arik, director of the BERC at MTSU.

But coupled with strong jobless numbers (unemployment claims fell 72% from last year), the housing market showed positive signs regarding homeowner vacancy rates, mortgage tax collections, home prices and mortgages past due.

Key report highlights:

  • Tennessee home prices continue to trend upward for all MSAs in Tennessee. For the second quarter, the Clarksville MSA saw the most significant increase in home prices from last year (30.5%), with the Nashville MSA closely behind (30.4%). The smallest increases were recorded in the Memphis MSA (20.6%) and Morristown MSA (21.3%).
  • Tennessee’s single-, multi-family and total home permits all fell both quarterly and yearly. The state recorded quarterly and annual decreases of 18% and 27.2%, respectively.
  • Closings for the Nashville, Knoxville, and Memphis regions “were a combination of increases and decreases” from the previous quarter. The Nashville area saw the most significant drop (4.3%), while the Knoxville and Memphis areas recorded closing increases (1.7% and 2.9%, respectively). Year-over-year changes were most significant for Nashville (-5.64%). Knoxville and Memphis experienced more modest changes, with a 0.4% increase in Knoxville and 0.6% drop in Memphis.

Arik noted that “a sign of uneasiness emerged in the corners of the housing market as reflected in significant drops in housing permit activities in Tennessee. It is also important to note that, albeit slight, the annual increase in foreclosure rates suggests an emerging sign of trouble for some homeowners.”

See the full report and more detailed breakdowns at https://www.mtsu.edu/berc/housing/.

BERC’s report is funded by Tennessee Housing Development Agency, or THDA. The quarterly report offers an overview of the state’s economy as it relates to the housing market and includes data on employment, housing construction, rental vacancy rates, real estate transactions and mortgages, home sales and prices, delinquencies and foreclosures.

The Business and Economic Research Center operates under the Jennings A. Jones College of Business at MTSU. For more information, visit http://mtsu.edu/berc/.

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