Posted on 01/04/2012 4:18:16 PM PST by SeekAndFind
Call it the Big SelloffAmerica is headed toward a future in which fewer people own the spaces they call home. The effective homeownership rate, which excludes borrowers whose homes are underwater, stands at 62 percent, down from 69 percent in 2006, according to a 2010 report by the New York Federal Reserve.
As more people move from owning to renting, apartment vacancy rates have fallen fast, from 8 percent in 2009 to 5.6 percent in third quarter 2011. Thats pushed up rents in all markets by 2.5 percent, including apartments and single-family homes, to an average of $846 nationwide, according to Local Market Monitor, a home price forecaster. For a two-bedroom dwelling, the average rent was at $1,020 in June 2011.
Those trends are just the beginning, concludes a July report from investment bank Morgan Stanley: the United States is becoming a nation of renters and home ownership will keep falling. And that, say some experts, could be good for the country.
This dramatic change, triggered by the 2008 housing collapse, has shifted peoples views of home ownership. The number of those who consider a home a safe investment fell from 83 percent in 2003 to 66 percent this year, according to a survey by Fannie Mae and two other organizations. In another poll last April, commissioned by real estate data firms RealtyTrac and Trulia, 40 percent of renters questioned said they plan never to buy a home. Another reasonmany baby boom retirees dont want the burden of home repairs, rising property taxes and other responsibilities.
Honey and Bryan Stempka, 36 and 31, are among the new skeptics of ownership. The couple bought a three-bedroom house in Mankato, Minnesota in 2008 for $145,000. They renovated three rooms, repainted, re-landscaped, made energy-saving improvements, and paid ahead on their mortgage, cutting their repayment time to 28½ years from 30. But earlier this year the Stempkas decided to move to northwestern Pennsylvania to be closer to family. Just one problemthe Minnesota house wont sell. In a neighborhood surrounded by foreclosures, its been on the market for 8 months for $139,900, and the Stempkas are thinking of dropping the price by $20,000. Honey Stempka says she never wants to own again: I struggle with that. I have this vision of having my own space for a garden. But I regret buying our house.
Laura Seitz, 60, is another former homeowner who doesnt want to own again. She bought her house in west Los Angeles in 1998. But last year a burst pipe in the house caused $18,000 in damage and she lost her job, so she decided to sell. Living in a desirable neighborhood helped hershe got 10 percent more than the asking price. Even so, she says that the burden of owning and caring for a home as a single woman was weighty, much more than I had anticipated. Now she rents in the same neighborhood and says, its a great feeling to be liberated.
She may be onto something: many experts now challenge the conventional wisdom that owning is a necessarily a sound life choice. Forbes contributor James Altucher argues that buying a home is a traphouses are illiquid investments that drain their owners time, energy, and cash and force them to stay put. Another skeptic is Yale economist Robert Shiller, co-creator of the Case-Shiller Home Price Index. He compiled data in 2006 showing that between 1890 and 2004, the return on investing in houses was just 0.4 percent a yeara period when the stock market grew at 9.6 percent annually. And in a paper this June in the journal Real Estate Economics, two researchers calculated that over the past 30 years, most often it would have been better to rent than buy. Renters who invested in stocks and bonds instead of home equity came out ahead 75 percent of the time.
Richard Florida, author of the best-selling The Rise of the Creative Class, argues that a high homeownership rate isnt just bad for individualsit hurts the economy too. The modern global marketplace requires workers who are mobile, but those who have homes cant sell quickly and move to take advantage of opportunities, says Florida in his latest book, The Great Reset. That conclusion is backed by a study released in September by the National Bureau of Economic Research, which reported that homeowners whose mortgages exceed the value of their houses are 30 percent less likely to move.
Developers are betting that the trend away from owning will continue. Construction of multi-family houses with at least two units increased by more than 30 percent in June, three times the rate of single-family homes, according to the Wall Street Journal. Apartment projects are taking off even in places hardest hit by the housing collapse. New York developer Barnet Liberman is building 240 apartments in downtown Las Vegas and is planning a 24-story, 1150-unit downtown building after that project is done. Both developments will target couples and families making $30,000 to $85,000people who want to exchange their lawn for a life, says Liberman. In hard-hit south Florida, developers also are kicking off a new round of apartment construction, with plans for 4000 rentals in Fort Lauderdale, Hollywood, and Plantation.
It remains to be seen whether renters increasing numbers will translate into changes in government priorities that favor home buyers. In 2009, $230 billion in federal money was devoted to helping home owners through policies like the mortgage interest deduction and support for Fannie Mae and Freddie Macfour times what was spent on improving rental affordability, according to the Congressional Budget Office. But the Morgan Stanley report cites evidence that the Obama administration is pulling back from past policies promoting ever-more homeownership. Recent policy pronouncements from the Treasury Department make clear that it is not the administrations goal to have all Americans become owners.
Any reforms in the system of federal subsidies for owners are likely to be gradual, says Wayne Yamano, vice president of John Burns Real Estate Consulting, which tracks real estate trends. Changes like eliminating the mortgage interest deduction or funneling public money into Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will be phased in over time, he says.
Were those to happen, they would level the playing field between homeowners and renters and likely drop the homeownership rate still further. In the eyes of reform advocates like Richard Florida, that would be welcome news. He cites Nobel prize-winning economist Edmund Phelps: It used to be the business of America was business. Now the business of America is homeownership. To recover and grow again, America needs to get over its house passion.
We just had a mortgage burning party last week and boy, does it feel good!
Didja ever notice (in whiny Andy Rooney voice)...
That when a Republican is in office and the economy isn’t doing so well, the headlines and stories they run to condemn Republicans and those who put them in office are, “Women starving across the country,” “People losing their homes,” “People go shirtless as they cannot afford clothes,” “Republicans want the elderly to starve,” “People cannot afford to date,” “People cannot afford to marry,” “People cannot afford to have children,” “Suicides increasing because of Republican economics.”
But then, when a leftist DemocRAT like Obammie the Commie is in office and they are deliberately destroying the economy, the headlines on sites like MSN and CNN and the entertainment sites and all those asinine sites that love stories with numbered lists “10 ways to shave seven pounds,” “Top three places to live,” “9 Essentials must-haves for driving to the store” the headlines try to cutsie-up the tanking economy with headlines like:
“How to live in a shoebox,” “How to have fun on a $10-dollar date,” “People find living together better than marriage,” “The health improvements of not eating for a few days.”
Ever since I noticed this, it really pi$$es me off, the obvious propaganda that the leftists spew constantly to prop up their tyrants, even in these little feel-good puff pieces.
Given the Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac disincentives to sane lending practices, I’d say that the “Home Ownership Bubble” just burst. Home ownership rates have been artificially high, IOW’s.
Hey, look at the bright side! Residential real estate will pick up again, when most of us Baby Boomers are finally dead in 20 years or so! Hope that cheered all of the corporate-government-pensioned NIMBYs, HOA queens and other commies up. ;-)
I can not advise anyone on what to do, but for me, buying a home and getting it paid off as quickly as possible is what allowed me to retire at 59.
A home similar to mine rents for close to $1,200 a month (which is what my annual property tax is).
With taxes and other expenses I would have to still be working to earn the $2,000 (rough estimate) just to pay the rent.
True I am responsible for maintenance and for insurance but the renter pays those cost as well, it is included in the rent.
I absolutely refused to refinance my home or to borrow money on it so when the housing bubble popped I lost nothing. The home is still valued at four times what I paid for it but it does not matter, we plan on living here until we die.
Simply put, not doing what you can to own your own home means you will have to earn more money in your old age to pay for rent.
Seeing the erosion of property taxes and of associated socialist trash is also hilarious and enjoying. ;-)
I work in a construction-related field. My anecdotal observations confirm the above excerpt.
Yep. I was wondering what benefit I get for doing the right thing and continuing to pay the mortgage on my underwater home, while so many in my community are walking away with nominal consequences. Then it hit me: I will still have a credit score, and can buy homes to rent to all of these people. They will pay off the mortgage for me and I will own the property.
I,m closing on my house at the end of the month and renting a place 2 miles away.
Yea, I’m living the American dream alright.
More like an American Nightmare.
Thank God i have 50% equity in the place.
Good news for us landlords. Rental properties are great investments.
The Current FReepathon Pays For The Current Quarters Expenses?
Yes, the article doesn’t address that. Eternal rent -vs- paying off your home and only paying property taxes.
I'm thinking the same thing. Rent to them idiot Liberals and get rich. Stupid is stupid, no?
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