Sunday, June 7, 2009

Deleveraging Is A Different Kind Of RE Recession!

The New York Times
June 7, 2009
Economic View

Why Home Prices May Keep Falling
By ROBERT J. SHILLER

HOME prices in the United States have been falling for nearly three years, and the decline may well continue for some time.

Even the federal government has projected price decreases through 2010. As a baseline, the stress tests recently performed on big banks included a total fall in housing prices of 41 percent from 2006 through 2010. Their “more adverse” forecast projected a drop of 48 percent — suggesting that important housing ratios, like price to rent, and price to construction cost — would fall to their lowest levels in 20 years.

Such long, steady housing price declines seem to defy both common sense and the traditional laws of economics, which assume that people act rationally and that markets are efficient. Why would a sensible person watch the value of his home fall for years, only to sell for a big loss? Why not sell early in the cycle? If people acted as the efficient-market theory says they should, prices would come down right away, not gradually over years, and these cycles would be much shorter.

But something is definitely different about real estate. Long declines do happen with some regularity. And despite the uptick last week in pending home sales and recent improvement in consumer confidence, we still appear to be in a continuing price decline.

There are many historical examples. After the bursting of the Japanese housing bubble in 1991, land prices in Japan’s major cities fell every single year for 15 consecutive years.

Why does this happen? One could easily believe that people are a little slower to sell their homes than, say, their stocks. But years slower?

Several factors can explain the snail-like behavior of the real estate market. An important one is that sales of existing homes are mainly by people who are planning to buy other homes. So even if sellers think that home prices are in decline, most have no reason to hurry because they are not really leaving the market.

Furthermore, few homeowners consider exiting the housing market for purely speculative reasons. First, many owners don’t have a speculator’s sense of urgency. And they don’t like shifting from being owners to renters, a process entailing lifestyle changes that can take years to effect.

Among couples sharing a house, for example, any decision to sell and switch to a rental requires the assent of both partners. Even growing children, who may resent being shifted to another school district and placed in a rental apartment, are likely to have some veto power.

In fact, most decisions to exit the market in favor of renting are not market-timing moves. Instead, they reflect the growing pressures of economic necessity. This may involve foreclosure or just difficulty paying bills, or gradual changes in opinion about how to live in an economic downturn.

This dynamic helps to explain why, at a time of high unemployment, declines in home prices may be long-lasting and predictable.

Imagine a young couple now renting an apartment. A few years ago, they were toying with the idea of buying a house, but seeing unemployment all around them and the turmoil in the housing market, they have changed their thinking: they have decided to remain renters. They may not revisit that decision for some years. It is settled in their minds for now.

On the other hand, an elderly couple who during the boom were holding out against selling their home and moving to a continuing-care retirement community have decided that it’s finally the time to do so. It may take them a year or two to sort through a lifetime of belongings and prepare for the move, but they may never revisit their decision again.

As a result, we will have a seller and no buyer, and there will be that much less demand relative to supply — and one more reason that prices may continue to fall, or stagnate, in 2010 or 2011.

All of these people could be made to change their plans if a sharp improvement in the economy got their attention. The young couple could change their minds and decide to buy next year, and the elderly couple could decide to further postpone their selling. That would leave us with a buyer and no seller, providing an upward kick to the market price.

For this reason, not all economists agree that home price declines are really predictable. Ray Fair, my colleague at Yale, for one, warns that any trend up or down may suddenly be reversed if there is an economic “regime change” — a shift big enough to make people change their thinking.

But market changes that big don’t occur every day. And when they do, there is a coordination problem: people won’t all change their views about homeownership at once. Some will focus on recent price declines, which may seem to belie any improvement in the economy, reinforcing negative attitudes about the housing market.

Even if there is a quick end to the recession, the housing market’s poor performance may linger. After the last home price boom, which ended about the time of the 1990-91 recession, home prices did not start moving upward, even incrementally, until 1997.

Robert J. Shiller is professor of economics and finance at Yale and co-founder and chief economist of MacroMarkets LLC.


Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

You have plenty oif company on your continued bearishness.


The Best And Worst Cities For Recession Recovery
Joshua Zumbrun, 06.10.09, 10:00 AM ET

"New York City, too, once the capital of finance, is now saddled with Wall Street-induced unemployment and homes that are completely unaffordable for most of the region's residents. The NAHB's Housing Opportunity Index reports that only 14% of homes in the New York-White Plains-Wayne area are affordable on the area's median income--by far the least affordable region measured by NAHB."

Anonymous said...

Mixed Signals on Housing Market
Dean Baker - CEPR's Housing Market Monitor

The end of the homebuyer's tax credit spurred housing starts.

The Census Bureau reported an unexpected jump in housing starts and permits in May. Nationwide, starts were up 17.2 percent in May from their April level. Permits increased by 4.0 percent. Starts in the Northeast increased by just 2.0 percent.

The rise in starts was strongest in multi-family units, which increased 77.1 percent from their April level. Starts of single-family homes improved by a far more modest 7.5 percent. Starts of single-family homes in the Northeast actually fell by 12.5 percent in May.

The positive news on starts contrasts with other news suggesting little evidence of a pickup in the housing market. Most importantly, the Mortgage Bankers Association Mortgage Applications Index showed applications for purchase mortgages remaining at very low levels, while applications for refinancing have plunged since peak levels in April.

The reason for the plunge in refinancing over the last two months is the sharp rise in mortgage interest rates. With interest rates close to a full percentage point higher than their April low, there are far fewer homeowners who stand to save money through refinancing. Unless the Fed makes a determined effort to push down mortgage interest rates in the months ahead, refinancing is likely to remain at very low levels.

The end of the refinancing wave will also be another source of downward pressure on the economy. If 15 percent of outstanding mortgages were refinanced over the months from February to April, this would have generated more than $15 billion in fees over this three-month period. On an annual basis, this is equal to $60 billion or 0.4 percent of GDP. As refinancing becomes a rarity, the demand for workers in this sector will plummet, leading to another round of layoffs in banking.

The other piece of notable negative news in the housing sector was the fall in the National Association of Builders' Confidence Index. This showed a fall in May, reversing modest upticks in prior months. Clearly the builders are not confident about the future of the housing market.

There is a simple way to reconcile the rise in permits and starts with other news about the economy in the last month, which has been largely negative. First, the April data was extraordinarily bad, making it easier to have a large jump the following month. The improvement in housing was measured against a very low base. For the country as a whole, starts were down by 45.2 percent compared with May of 2008. In the Northeast, starts were down by an incredible 58.5 percent from their year ago level.

The most likely explanation for the uptick in starts is the expiration of the first time homebuyer tax credit in November. If builders had already purchased land and made plans for building units, it would be very helpful to have the homes completed, or nearly so, before the expiration date on the tax credit. For this reason, it is likely that many builders moved their plans forward. If this view is accurate, then starts and permits should begin to decline further by the end of the summer.

Overall, there is little evidence to suggest that the housing market is nearing any sort of turnaround. As noted before, a turnaround will show up first in an increase in sales, which will gradually whittle down the huge excess inventory of unsold homes. It is implausible that the construction sector will rebound in any significant way as long as there is a huge glut of homes already on the market.

-- June 17, 2009

LizPendens said...

If the flippers and investors are the ones involved in most of the action on the lower end, and most of the action is on the lower end, then the sales price increases reflected by the Case Shiller index are quite misleading.