As the state’s population grows, so does the need for more housing. Here are the data and tools you need to keep up with housing market trends in your area.
Whether you’re talking about DFW’s financial services industry, Austin’s tech sector, Houston’s energy corridor, or the medical hub that is San Antonio, commercial real estate is big business in Texas.
Mineral rights. Water issues. Wildlife management and conservation. Eminent domain. The number of factors driving Texas land markets is as big as the state itself. Here’s information that can help.
Center research is fueled by accurate, high-quality, up-to-date data acquired from such sources as Texas MLSs, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, and the U.S. Census Bureau. Data and reports included here are free.
Stay current on the latest happenings around the Center and the state with our news releases, NewsTalk Texas online searchable news database, and more.
Established in 1971, the Texas Real Estate Research Center is the nation’s largest publicly funded organization devoted to real estate research. Learn more about our history here and meet our team.
Propelled by the bankruptcy of Silicon Valley Bank, Texas business bankruptcy filings hit their highest level since April 2020, showing signs of a cooling economy. While the prospect for general business activity from the Federal Reserve surveys was not high, employment remained strong, adding more than 28,000 new positions. As spring arrived, demand for Texas housing and exports rebounded in March.
By
Joshua Roberson
,
John Shaunfield
,and
Weiling Yan
Outlook for the Texas Economy summarizes significant state economic activity and trends. All measurements are calculated using seasonally adjusted data, and percentage changes are calculated month over month, unless stated otherwise. Click here to receive email notifications each time this report is published.
Propelled by the bankruptcy of Silicon Valley Bank, Texas business bankruptcy filings hit their highest level since April 2020, showing signs of a cooling economy. While the prospect for general business activity from the Federal Reserve surveys was not high, employment remained strong, adding more than 28,000 new positions. As spring arrived, demand for Texas housing and exports rebounded in March.
Housing Market Has Strong 2023 Start
Housing demand started the year off strong as sales rose month-over-month (MOM) for first quarter 2023. Total home sales gained 2.2 percent MOM, equating to an additional 1,300 homes sold over February. Three of the four major metros had gains in monthly home sales, with Dallas being the only one to have a drop, moving 97 fewer homes than the month before. Houston had the largest monthly increase, improving 9.6 percent MOM. Austin and San Antonio lagged with sales of 2,738 and 3,103, respectively. Across the board, these numbers represent stark returns to form for the metros and their seasonal housing trends.
Sales volumes for Dallas, the metro with the most sales in Texas, were consistent with last year across most price cohorts. However, transactions for homes on the two tails—below $200K and above $750K both shrank significantly. Transactions in the upper tail dropped to 805 units in March, falling more than 15 percent year-over-year (YOY).
Labor Market Expands Despite a Spike in Bankruptcy Fillings
The Texas unemployment rate was 4 percent, ten basis points higher than a year ago. Houstin had the highest unemployment rate at 4.3 percent while Austin had the lowest at 3.2. DFW and San Antonio each held the same rate at 3.7 percent. The Texas labor force participation rate climbed for the third consecutive month, reaching 63.9 percent. Despite this run, the labor force rate still has not recovered from the drop that began in May 2022. With the inflow of domestic and international migrants, the labor force had 14.9 million workers.
A spike of business bankruptcy filings occurred at both the national and state levels. The Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts reported 1,657 bankruptcy cases, with the number of cases in Texas accounting for over 20 percent. Failed enterprises doubled in Texas in March, reaching 337 filings. The monthly average over the past ten years has been 200.
Despite the abnormally high number of failed businesses in March, total nonfarm employment grew by 28,600 workers. Professional/scientific services and accommodation added 6,800 and 6,000 new positions, respectively. Construction had strong numbers as well with 5,800 new payroll employees. Alternatively, administrative/waste management/remediation services—one of the sectors in the professional/business industry—had a significant dismissal of 12,300 workers. In this subsector, investigation/security services reported some growth alone, while administrative/support services and employment services made up most of the loss.
Service-Providing Sectors Grind to a Halt
Gradual slowdowns defined the Dallas Fed’s Service Sector Outlook Survey for March with many aspects of the index declining. The employment index dropped below zero for the first time since summer 2020, the peak of the pandemic lockdowns. This indicated that employment growth has contracted for the first time in nearly two years. General business activity also dipped as outlook uncertainty rose, meaning respondents to the survey are not optimistic about what the future holds. Future general business activity dropped nearly nine points as future revenue fell eight, both correlating with mixed feelings about the future of the sector. This reflects the public’s general uncertainty about the economy.
Retail activity stagnated in March as sales remained unchanged from February. The Dallas Fed’s Retail Outlook Survey remains solidly in negative territory as conditions worsened. Employment and hours worked decreased as the index receded, and both are in negative territory. Future activity expectations are mixed with general business activity remaining staunchly negative, while future employment remains positive. Growth is expected to continue as the year goes on but will likely depend on economic conditions going forward.
Global Trade Pivots as Spring Comes
The Texas trade-weighted value of the dollar index1 had a strong year in 2022, and the February reading sustained the year-ago measurement of 107. Amid the strong trade value, foreign traders must pay more in their local currency for the same basket of goods. Like last year’s trend, Texas’ exports bounced up 16 percent MOM in spring, as all-commodity exports reported a monthly increase of 25.5 billion in March. This marked the first monthly gain in the past five months.
Demand for the top three manufacturing exports jumped—petroleum/coal products (23.6 percent MOM), chemicals (19.7 percent MOM), and computer/electronic products (18.7 percent MOM). Demand for Texas’ crude oil exports rose over one fifth, as demand more than doubled from February in Brazil, China, Netherland, and Spain.
___________________________________
1 The release of the trade section is lagging the Outlook for the Texas Economy by one month.
Economic Overview
The Texas Leading Economic Index was balanced at 104 for four months (2007=100), showing stable prospects for future overall business activity.
Texas consumers had been reporting gradual confidence boosts since the Federal Reserve first announced the series of interest hikes in June 2022.
The headline Consumer Price Index (CPI) rate inched up to 5 percent. Food inflation remained stubborn at 8.5 percent, while energy prices shrank 6.4 percent due to more affordable fuel oil and gasoline.
Corroborating with the more affordable energy commodities, the West Texas Intermediate (WTI)= crude oil spot price dropped 32.5 percent YOY from $108.5 to $73.3, and the Henry Hub spot price plummeted 52.9 percent YOY from $4.9 to $2.3 per million British thermal units (BTU).
Texas’ crude oil production stayed at 5.3 million barrels per day in February despite the active rig count dropping to 370, two rigs lower than last month.
After the uptick at 3.75 percent in February, the ten-year U.S. Treasury bond yield slid to 3.7 percent in March.
The cost of buying homes rose again, as the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation’s 30-year fixed-rate reached a four-month peak at 6.5 percent.
Download PDF
Did you like this Article?
1
In This Article
Contents
Related Data & Reports
You might also like
Commercial
9 minute read
Feb 11 2025
2025 Texas Real Estate Forecast
Texas real estate decisions impact everyone, from those buying or renting homes in the state’s smallest communities to global firms looking to relocate. Informed insights from our economic research team appear in this special forecast report.
Like last quarter, border employment grew in 3Q2024but not enough to prevent an increase in the unemployment rate. Housing sales had a worse second quarter this year than last year, and home prices increased in two of the four border metros.
Home sales typically cool off by October, but this year is a little different with sales in both September and October higher than they were during the summer. The rate of new listings is still on the rise resulting in rising inventory levels.
As the state’s population grows, so does the need for more housing. Here are the data and tools you need to keep up with housing market trends in your area.
Whether you’re talking about DFW’s financial services industry, Austin’s tech sector, Houston’s energy corridor, or the medical hub that is San Antonio, commercial real estate is big business in Texas.
Mineral rights. Water issues. Wildlife management and conservation. Eminent domain. The number of factors driving Texas land markets is as big as the state itself. Here’s information that can help.
Center research is fueled by accurate, high-quality, up-to-date data acquired from such sources as Texas MLSs, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, and the U.S. Census Bureau. Data and reports included here are free.
Stay current on the latest happenings around the Center and the state with our news releases, NewsTalk Texas online searchable news database, and more.
Established in 1971, the Texas Real Estate Research Center is the nation’s largest publicly funded organization devoted to real estate research. Learn more about our history here and meet our team.