September 25, 2018 More Homeowners Will Stay Put New data from the S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller Index of home prices shows that the pace of home price increase is still elevated, but is finally starting to slow, as we had been anticipating. The 20-City Composite posted a 5.9% year-over-year gain in July, down from 6.4% in…
Read MoreBrad Hunter
Brad Hunter was the Chief Economist at HomeAdvisor from 2016 through 2018.
Hunter joined the company in 2016 and led HomeAdvisor’s economic research and analysis on the home improvement industry, home remodeling data and the U.S housing market. Hunter informs HomeAdvisor’s True Cost Report, an annual report that analyzes homeowner spending, and the HomeAdvisor Farnsworth Index, a quarterly survey that measures industry confidence among service professionals.
Hunter has been invited to speak at numerous industry conferences, and is regularly cited in local, national and trade publications, including CNBC, Bloomberg News, Forbes, The Washington Post and The Wall Street Journal. Prior to joining HomeAdvisor, Hunter was Chief Economist and Director of Consulting for Metrostudy, where he orchestrated hundreds of area-specific housing market studies over his 20 years at the firm.
Hunter holds a degree in economics from the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, and has been a guest lecturer at Harvard University.
Most Recent Posts:
The Home Price Deceleration Has Begun
August 28, 2018 New data from the S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller Index of home prices shows that the pace of home price increase is still elevated, but is finally starting to slow, as was inevitable. The S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller U.S. National Home Price Index showed a 6.2% annual rate of increase in June, down from 6.4% in…
Read MoreHow Renters are Remodeling, and What Happens When They Buy?
Renters are Having Two Distinct Impacts A new study finds that renters are making two notable impacts on home improvement demand. They are taking on small projects in their rental units — installing closet systems, painting, wall-mounting the TV and hiding wires from their computer and surround sound systems. They are finally becoming homeowners in larger…
Read MoreU.S. Unemployment: What it Means for Homebuyers and Homeowners
August 3, 2018 The unemployment rate is hovering near an 18 year low and that is good… and bad. A low jobless rate is good because most people who want a job have a job, but an unemployment rate this low also creates some challenges. Having Trouble Finding Enough Workers Along with a very low…
Read MoreLow Supply Forces Home Sales Lower (Again)
July 23, 2018 New data on existing home sales just out from the National Association of Realtors (NAR) for June show that sales volume was once again down from the prior month (at 5.38 million, which was lower than 5.45 million expected by the consensus), and the estimate from the prior month was revised downward….
Read MoreBuilders Are Not Keeping up with Demand
July 18, 2018 Housing production has remained lower than demand for the past eight years, ever since the housing market dusted itself off and started climbing back up from the bottom. Today’s number shows that this problem has worsened. Both single-family and apartment construction fell in the new data for June. Single-Family Construction Disappoints Single-family…
Read MoreHome Prices Return to Bubble Peaks in Large Markets: Many Deciding to “Stay Put”
June 26, 2018 Home prices are still rising more than 6% annually, heightening affordability concerns. As home shoppers increasingly find homes unaffordable, some are re-thinking their approach. A new study from HomeAdvisor shows that many homeowners are opting to stay where they are and remodel rather than move. Half of all respondents said they are currently…
Read MoreHome Prices Fly High in the Mountains (But a Slowdown is Coming)
June 21, 2018 Home prices have risen 6.4% over the past twelve months, according to the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA). This covers the period from April 2017 to April 2018. The rate of price increase was greatest in the Mountain Region, where prices rose 8.9%. Although the rate of appreciation was strong over the…
Read MoreHome Sales Decline Amid High Prices and Low Supply
June 20, 2018 New data on existing home sales just out from the National Association of Realtors (NAR) for May show that sales volume is now 3.0 percent below a year ago and has fallen year-over-year for three straight months. And NAR revised the number for the prior month downward, so the reading is even…
Read MoreWhy Business is Booming for Mechanical Contractors, and What That Means for Home Improvement
Every quarter, HomeAdvisor and The Farnsworth Group conduct a survey to track business confidence among thousands of trade professionals and small businesses in 13 different categories. The responses vary from quarter to quarter, and the questions span from “How do you expect your revenue to change over the next year?” to “What type of impact…
Read MoreWhich 5 States Had the Most Equity Gains in the Past Year?
In the past five years, the country’s homeowner equity has doubled – and this is driving billions of dollars’ worth of home improvement. But homeowners in which states are benefitting the most? According to a recent report from the mortgage data firm CoreLogic, five states stand out as the ones that have gained the most…
Read MoreWhy A New Roof May Cost You Zero Dollars (in the Long Run)
When a homeowner takes on a large home improvement project, they are generally doing it for their own benefit and enjoyment. And although they may anticipate the project will greatly increase the value of the home, most projects only add a small portion to the total. However, the best-of-all-worlds home improvement projects do exist –…
Read MoreWhy it’s a Good Idea to Put a Home Equity Line of Credit Towards Home Remodeling
13 is usually an unlucky number. But what about $13.7 trillion? That’s the total amount of home equity in the country (as of the first quarter of 2017), according to recent data from Freddie Mac. That’s double than what it was five years ago – and it’s predicted to increase even more as we move…
Read MoreWhy So Many Millennial Homeowners Are Remodeling Their Basements
Millennials are just starting to break into home ownership, but affordability is still a challenge. While dreams of owning their own home may have come true, many millennial homeowners may not have been able to put an offer on their dream home – and had to settle for an older home with some differed maintenance,…
Read MoreFive Home Projects to Address Immediately After Your House Has Flooded
The impact a Category 3 or 4 hurricane can have on your most valuable asset – your home – can be disastrous, and incredibly overwhelming. Depending on the storm and its staggering effects, homeowners might face a number of devastating problems: from feet of standing water in the living room, to trees and debris spread…
Read MoreWhy Low Housing Inventory Leads to High Home Improvement Spending
Home shoppers around the country are frustrated. There aren’t enough homes for sale that meet their needs, and those that are available are often the subject of high price bidding wars. It’s no wonder that so many homeowners – Baby Boomers in particular — are finding it more sensible to stay in their current home…
Read MoreThe Five Most Popular – And Most Expensive – Home Improvement Projects
Homeowners across the nation are not only spending more money on remodeling – they’re tackling much larger, more aesthetic and more expensive home improvement projects than five or six years ago. Instead of just replacing a faucet and handle, they’re upgrading the whole sink (…and what good is an updated sink if it’s next to…
Read MoreWhy the Home Improvement Industry is Worth Billions
The home improvement industry is big – and it’s only getting bigger. A doubling of the average homeowner’s equity in the past five years has stimulated steady growth, allowing home improvement spending to grow nearly twice as fast as the rest of retail. But how did it get to this point? And what’s in store…
Read MoreThree Reasons Landscapers Are So Optimistic About Their Business
Each quarter, HomeAdvisor works with The Farnsworth Group — the top market research firm in the home improvement space — to conduct a survey among nearly 2,000 home service professionals to measure confidence in both their business and the industry. Q2 results are in, and landscaping companies are rolling in the green and mowing over…
Read MoreToday’s Resale Housing Market: Searching High and Low
June 21, 2017 New data on existing home sales just out from the National Association of Realtors (NAR) show strong demand in the month of May. As a matter of fact, demand was stronger than expected, based upon the average forecasts of economists nationwide. The new NAR report highlights that inventories are extraordinarily low right…
Read MoreHeard at NAREE: Ugly Homes Transformed…for Profit
June 19, 2017NAREE, the National Association of Real Estate Editors, always attracts thought leaders and interesting speakers to their national conference in Denver, and last week’s was no exception. I wanted to share some points made by other speakers that I found to be of interest. Of particular interest to me was the panel of…
Read MoreNew Home Production is Falling Behind
May 24, 2017 The latest monthly data on new home sales showed a bit of a pullback, but the overall trend continues to be solidly positive. The spring selling season is going extremely well for most builders, and pricing power for them is proving to still be strong so far, even in the face of…
Read MoreHome Depot Earnings – Spring 2017
May 18, 2017 The home improvement industry is growing almost twice as fast as the rest of consumer retail. Homeowners are increasingly willing to open their wallets when it comes to investing in their homes. The latest data point adds further evidence of this trend: sales at Home Depot stores in the quarter were $23.9…
Read MoreHome Builder Confidence and Lot Supplies
New Lot Development is Not Keeping Up With Demand Builder confidence indicators show that home builders are extremely confident. That said, the pace of new construction fell in April (-2.6% versus March, and essentially flat versus a year ago). We see the overall pace of new home construction as still rising at a modest pace; I…
Read MoreModifications for Independent Living: Going Beyond Grab Bars and Ramps
May 3, 2017 (Percentage of “location within home” for Aging-in-Place Modifications) A key factor driving the current surge in home improvement relates to the changing needs of the baby boom generation. Age and mobility-related modifications are already a $13 billion sector of the economy, and growing rapidly. More importantly, this surge will incorporate a broader…
Read MoreNew Report: Home Improvement Per-Household Jumps 57%
In our new HomeAdvisor report, we revealed the findings of our latest survey of homeowners. This random sample of 500 homeowners reported that they have increased their expenditure on home improvement/repairs/maintenance by 57% in the past twelve months. At $5,157 during the last twelve months, this is also a higher level of per-household spending than…
Read MoreIndex of Remodeler Sentiment Shows “Extreme” Confidence
April 11, 2017We at HomeAdvisor have just launched a new quarterly index of sentiment among home improvement contractors. In collaboration with The Farnsworth Group, we surveyed 1,744 companies, asking their leadership about their current and expected future business prospects. For more comprehensive results, methodology, and survey dates, explore the detailed data, and watch for ongoing quarterly…
Read MoreTwin Engines of Growth: Confidence and Home Equity
March 23, 2017 Homeowners in the U.S. have become wealthier just by being homeowners. According to the Federal Reserve’s household flow of funds data, the average homeowner went from $85,000 in home equity in the year 2011 to $167,000 in 2015. As of today, in early 2017, the average homeowners equity is more than DOUBLE…
Read MoreImpressive Resilience Seen in Single-Family Construction Data
March 16, 2017 New data from the Commerce Department shows that the market for new single-family homes continued to strengthen as apartment-building construction weakened. Single-family construction rose 6.5% in February from the previous month, while multifamily construction fell 3.7%. As we had been predicting, multifamily construction has started to soften, following an extremely strong multi-year…
Read MoreBuilder Confidence Back to 2005 (Peak!) Levels
Home builders are feeling more confident than they have any time since the (2005) peak of the housing market. Builder confidence in the market for newly-built single-family homes jumped six points to a level of 71 on the National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI). This is the highest reading since June…
Read MoreHarvard Report: Takeaways and Further Thoughts
February 28, 2017 I just read the new report called “Improving America’s Housing: Demographic Change and the Remodeling Outlook” The Harvard Joint Center, as always, did a fantastic job summarizing the key trends and issues. Here are some of my takeaways and thoughts. Not One, but Two 900-Pound Gorillas (The Boomer and Millennial Generations) The…
Read MoreHome Depot’s Strong Results and The Outlook for Home Improvement
February 21, 2017 With more homeowners feeling flush from a sustained rise in their property value, home improvement spending is on the rise, and The Home Depot has once again nailed down its position as the leader in the home improvement retail business, $22.2 billion in sales in the fourth quarter, beating analysts’ predictions averaging…
Read MoreQuoteables from KBIS
February 1, 2017 Credit: KBIS Record attendance at the Kitchen and Bath Industry Show (KBIS) in January illustrates the growth in this sector of the home improvement industry. I heard a lot of insightful discussions about the industry at KBIS, which inspired me to jot down some valuable nuggets and merge them with my own…
Read More“Heard in the Halls” at KBIS
January 20, 2017 Just back from KBIS (the Kitchen and Bath show in Orlando), and I was struck by how overwhelmingly positive and optimistic the mood was. I met three business owners who have businesses that are unable to keep up with all the requests they are getting for their home improvement services…
Read MoreLeading Indicator Points to 6.7% Growth in 2017
(Photo from Joint Center of Housing Studies) One of the indicators I like to watch is the Leading Indicator of Remodeling Activity (LIRA), put out by the Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies. The latest update is out now, and it incorporates new data from the Census Bureau (the American Housing Survey). The new Census…
Read MoreHome Improvement and the White House
January 3, 2017 The election of a new president can have both positive and negative effects on the economy — and on the home improvement industry in particular. There is a lot of uncertainty about what lies ahead no matter your ideology. Here’s a look at some possible scenarios. On the positive side, tax cuts…
Read MoreProspective 2017 Home Improvement Trends: First-Timers and Fixer-Uppers
January 3, 2017 2017’s prospective home improvement trends are starting to come into better focus — and all signs point to a surge in first-time home buyers and home improvement spending. In fact, HomeAdvisor’s 2017 forecast calls for a continued dwindling of “distress” and a continued increase in the number of “normal” home sales. And…
Read MoreFive Things To Know About Home Office Attitudes and Trends
December 13, 2016 Shift in Home Office Trends Home offices became increasingly popular during the 1990s and 2000s, but as of the last few years, some renovation pros are seeing a decline in the demand for home improvement services related to working from home. More and more people are working from home, so why the…
Read More3rd Quarter: Real Estate Revenue Growth Surpasses Most Other Industries
December 12, 2016 Boom in Real Estate Revenue The economy is growing at a relatively modest pace, but new data from the Census Bureau show that revenue in real estate and rental and leasing is growing faster than the other industries that the agency tracks. Total revenue for the third quarter of 2016, in a…
Read MoreThe 2017 Housing Market Forecast
The 2017 housing outlook is one of diverging trends. HomeAdvisor’s forecast calls for single-family housing to rise at a rate similar to the 2016 rate, but for multifamily construction (apartments and condos) to fall, as the recent apartment boom finally winds down. The single-family home increase is because of job growth and rising household formations,…
Read MoreWhen Mortgage Rates Rise, Home Improvement Will Follow
November 29, 2016 By: Brad Hunter, HomeAdvisor’s Chief Economist As mortgage rates increase over the next few years, home improvement activity is likely to increase with them. This may seem counter intuitive, but you can expect two somewhat opposing effects: one highly positive and one slightly negative. Negative Effect The negative effect will stem from…
Read MoreSingle-Family Home Sales: The West is the Best
November 23, 2016 Sales of new single-family houses in October 2016 were at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 563,000, according to estimates released jointly today by the U.S. Census Bureau and the Department of Housing and Urban Development. This is 1.9% below the revised September rate of 574,000. That said, the number is 17.8%…
Read MoreHow to Think About the New Housing Data
November 17, 2016 The new data on housing starts just came out, showing a 25.5% increase in the month of October (seasonally-adjusted percent increase from September, which was revised upward). Although most of the improvement was due to a 74.5% increase in multifamily construction, single-family starts increased nicely as well (up 10.7%). I hasten to…
Read MoreHome Depot Sales Beating the Rest of the Economy
November 15, 2016 Retail sales, across all types of stores, have shown significant improvement, but Home Depot continues to run rings around many other types of retail. Home Depot just completed their conference call with industry analysts, and they described their business results for their fiscal third quarter. I jotted down some of the key…
Read MoreMore Evidence on the “Nesting is Investing” Trend
November 11, 2016 Recent comments from home products manufacturers on their quarterly earnings calls supports our thesis that people are finally getting around to taking on long-deferred home improvements. Homeowners are now more readily upgrading to higher-quality products. I was reading some research from UBS’ excellent industry analyst Sue Maklari, and she cited some comments from…
Read MoreKitchens and Baths with a “Thriving in Place” Spin
Want in on a multi-billion-dollar business opportunity? Specialize in thriving-in-place projects. Roughly 108 million U.S. citizens have surpassed age 50—and the majority of them wish to live comfortably and independently in their homes for as long as possible. The reality is that most of these people will have to modify their existing homes to make…
Read MoreAging (“Thriving”) in Place: A $13 Billion Opportunity
The Opportunity I have commented on the “billion-dollar” opportunity for home improvement aimed at what we call “Thriving in Place.” Now I have a number to attach to it. The Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard University has studied the industry thoroughly and found that the market for this kind of renovation is $13…
Read MoreThe Third-Quarter HomeAdvisor Report: The Taming of the Resale
October 4, 2016 On homeowners’ minds: taming those overgrown plants, bugs, and pesky critters! In the third quarter of 2016, the nation’s homeowners increased their orders for services related to pest control, lawn care, and landscaping faster than they did for any other categories of home services. New data from HomeAdvisor, which compare the third…
Read MoreLifestyle Investments Drive Kitchen and Bath Remodeling
Remodeling is on the rise, and consumers are now tackling larger kitchen and bathroom renovations than in previous years. Whole-room remodels are the kinds of discretionary (as opposed to immediately-necessary) projects that typically get put off when the economy is soft. Now that the lingering effects of the recession have mostly faded, homeowners are feeling…
Read MoreA Case-in-Point: Smart-Home Tech and the Elderly
Earlier this week, I attended the “Remodeling Futures Conference” held at the Harvard Faculty Club, and put on by the Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies. There was a record turnout, including members of the remodeling industry, academia, industry associations, and government (Census Bureau). There was a focus on home automation, covering smart-home trends,…
Read MoreEmpty-Nesters, Smart-Home Tech & Their Impact on Home Improvement Trends
June 17, 2016 Baby boomers account for nearly half of all spending on home improvement projects nationwide and they when they undertake a project they invest “for keeps.” More than 60% of them plan to stay in their home as they age, so with that expectation in mind, they tend to pay a little more…
Read MoreNesting Is Investing
HomeAdvisor Chief Economist Brad Hunter reports consumers are becoming more cautious with their money, which has positive implications for home improvement spending. Last week Macy’s, Nordstrom and Kohl’s all reported disappointing first quarters and experienced big stock price declines. Folks are shopping at the discount chains (or online) instead of at Macy’s, and the key theme is that they are trying to make their dollars go farther.
Read MoreOutlook for Home Improvement Continues to Brighten
May 21, 2016 It’s been a busy day for remodeling trends and stats, and the news is decidedly positive. The National Association of Homebuilders (NAHB) released their RMI (Remodelers Index) and the Harvard Joint Center released their LIRA (Leading Indicator for Remodeling). They both showed that more remodelers are seeing increases than decreases. The forward-looking…
Read MoreReport from PCBC: New Home Construction
July 6, 2016 I just got back from the Pacific Coast Builders Conference (PCBC) in San Francisco, and I heard some positive sentiment (Brexit shock notwithstanding) from builder executives. The level of traffic through showrooms and the quality of traffic have improved, supporting the pace of sales so far this selling season. Builders Focus on…
Read MoreRemodeling, Jobs, and Consumer Wherewithal
June 8, 2016 The recent poor performance of labor markets adds to concerns that consumers are pulling in their horns. Retail sales at major department store chains have been dismal. Despite this, home-improvement spending has held up well. It will be important to watch measures of consumer confidence to see if the public psyche weakens…
Read MoreHome Improvement and “Churn”
February 11, 2016 The number of home improvement projects underway at any given time depends heavily on what I call “churn,” or the rate of turnover as it relates to homes. The rate of churn across America has rebounded since the Great Recession — and with an increase in churn has come an increase in…
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