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Housing Bubble Trouble: Have We Been Living Beyond Our Means?
The Weekly Standard ^ | 4/10/2006 | Andrew Laperriere

Posted on 04/03/2006 7:38:13 AM PDT by ex-Texan

With new home slaes down 10.5 percent in February, and with home prices declining for the fourth month in a row, it's high time for a sober look at the consequences of a major housing correction. The Federal Reserve, Wall Street economists, and other observers of the U.S. economy are closely watching the housing market because it has been a key driver of economic growth over the past several years.

Roughly a quarter of the jobs created since the 2001 recession have been in construction, real estate, and mortgage finance. Even more important, consumers have withdrawn $2.5 trillion in equity from their homes during this time, spending as much as half of it and thus making a huge contribution to the growth the U.S. economy has enjoyed in recent years (consumer spending accounts for two-thirds of GDP).

But consumers cannot keep spending more than they make. Eventually, home prices will flatten, the flood of "cash out" refinancings will become a trickle, and consumer spending will slow, as will job creation in housing-related industries. The big question is this: Will the housing sector experience a soft landing and slow the economy or a hard landing that pushes us into recession?

Countless articles in the financial and popular press have now been devoted to the question of whether we are in a housing "bubble." It is a favorite topic of many liberal economists, columnists, and bloggers, who argue that President Bush's tax cuts and other policies have created a hollow and unsustainable economy. They are laying the groundwork to hang a housing bust around the necks of President Bush and congressional Republicans.

Economic observers on the right have been strangely silent on this debate. A few conservatives have argued that the record appreciation of home prices is justified by economic fundamentals. Others, who apparently slept through the 80 percent decline in the NASDAQ, don't believe bubbles are possible in a free market economy. Certainly most conservatives have an innate optimism about America and the resilience of its free market economy, and a strong and well-justified aversion to doomsayers. And naturally, the White House and congressional Republicans have no interest in highlighting the vulnerabilities of the economy.

Yet the concerns about unsustainable growth in consumer debt and home prices are not easily dismissed. A weakening housing market could transform what has been a virtuous cycle into a vicious one, substantially reducing economic growth during the next couple of years (and going into the 2008 election). If economic analysts on the right ignore this risk, they may be blindsided by a weaker economy. They will also be unprepared to answer those on the left who will blame tax cuts for what could be a painful unwinding of a credit bubble that, in fact, was fueled by a loose monetary policy from 2002 to 2004.

THE CRUX OF THE DEBATE IS HOUSE PRICES. If the inflated prices are justified by economic fundamentals and sustainable, then the 82 percent increase in mortgage debt since 2000 will probably turn out to be innocuous and the risks to the economy minimal. If, on the other hand, prices are out of whack, painful adjustments lie ahead.

Unfortunately, the weight of the evidence strongly suggests a bubble. The price of the median home is up an inflation-adjusted 50 percent during the last five years, an unprecedented national increase. It is true, as Alan Greenspan and others have observed, that real estate is regional, and much of the country has not experienced significant price gains. However, prices are overextended in enough areas that a real estate correction would have national fallout. The mortgage insurance company PMI estimates that regions accounting for more than 40 percent of the nation's housing stock are overvalued by more than 15 percent. Other estimates of overvaluation are much higher.

Economists at international banking giant HSBC have identified 18 states and the District of Columbia as "bubble zones." (Chart not posted on web site) House prices in these zones look remarkably similar to the rise in the S&P 500 during the 1990s stock market bubble. They have dangerously diverged from historic valuation trends, and thus are very likely to drop during the next few years.

Just as cheerleaders of the high-tech bubble of the late 1990s developed ever more creative explanations for why traditional metrics of valuing stocks no longer applied, the same has been true during the housing bubble. Housing bulls point to immigration, building restrictions, Baby Boomer demand for second homes, and other seemingly plausible justifications for skyrocketing home prices. But examining the value of housing using time-tested and common-sense metrics such as price-to-income and price-to-rent ratios suggest the gains in the bubble areas can't be explained by economic fundamentals.

Consider the price-to-income ratio (above, right), an obvious measure of affordability. This ratio has reached an unprecedented level in the bubble markets. While this ratio hovered around its average of 4-to-1 for the past 30 years, it has zoomed to nearly 8-to-1. The current figure is 3.6 standard deviations from its average level, which, if the data have a normal bell-shaped distribution, means the odds of the price-to-income ratio reaching this level would be less than 1 in 300. In other words, it is off the charts.

The National Association of Realtors recently produced an analysis of about 100 different metropolitan areas and found prices justified in every one. The NAR concludes it would practically take a depression for home values to drop 5 percent. But this is an awfully rosy scenario from a group that routinely warns of 15 percent declines should Congress even tinker with the home mortgage interest deduction.

Consider the case of the Washington, D.C., area. According to NAR, the price-to-income ratio has averaged about 2-1 for the past 25 years and now stands at a record 3.4-to-1, or 70 percent above its normal level. Assuming incomes grow 5 percent a year in the D.C. area (the average of the past decade), home prices would have to drop 25 percent for this ratio to return to its historic average within the next five years.

An even better indicator of how divorced home prices are from their underlying economic value is the price-to-rent ratio (see chart, top of next column). In the Washington, D.C., metro area, which had remained relatively constant for several decades, this ratio has soared since 2000. Yet home prices and rents should remain closely linked. Why would one buy a house, condo, or vacation home if it was significantly cheaper to rent it? Or why would an investor buy a property that rents for far less than his mortgage and other costs? Rent is a reality check because it reflects the actual earnings power of the asset.

Consider the example of a townhouse in Fairlington, a venerable apartment and townhouse community in the Virginia suburbs just a few miles from the nation's capital. It's an instructive example because there are hundreds of similar units, and those put on the market at the prevailing market price move quickly. A typical three bedroom townhouse in Fairlington recently sold for $575,000. Assuming the owner put 10 percent down and took out a traditional 30-year fixed-rate mortgage, the monthly payment would be just under $3,200. Add in property taxes, a condo fee, and the tax breaks for home ownership, and the cost of owning this unit comes to about $3,000 a month. (Note that this analysis takes into account the lower cost of owning due to low interest rates and ignores the $57,500 down payment.) Yet the very same place rents for no more than $1,700 a month, or just over half the cost of ownership.

Why own it? One powerful reason must be an expected profit down the road. People are buying in the face of sky-high prices because they've seen so many of their friends or relatives make a fortune in real estate; besides (they tell themselves), everyone knows real estate prices never fall. As with the stock market during the tech bubble, many are basing purchasing decisions not on underlying economic value, but on what they think they can sell a property for in the future--the very definition of a speculative bubble.

NOT ONLY ARE HOUSE PRICES at extreme levels by traditional measures, but the manner in which home purchases have been financed in recent years is also disconcerting. Consider the growth of interest-only and "pay-option" adjustable rate mortgages--loans that initially don't require borrowers to repay principal. With the latter, also known as an option-ARM, the outstanding balance owed can actually get bigger every month. A few years ago these loans barely existed. Last year they accounted for more than a third of new loans (see chart at right). What's worse, the vast majority of these loans were extended based on "stated income," which means the bank didn't verify the income of the borrower. Of course, consumers usually have to pay more if they don't provide tax and payroll records to the bank to verify their income. Common sense suggests many are fibbing about their income to qualify for a larger loan.

Such loans are risky because after an initial period of three or five years with low rates and no principal payments, the loans "reset," and consumers can experience 50 percent or even 100 percent increases in their monthly payments. About $2 trillion in loans, or a quarter of outstanding mortgage debt, will reset in this fashion during the next two years according to Economy.com. Therefore, millions of households are about to experience significant payment shock.

A recent study by First American Corp. shows that many of the borrowers who have taken advantage of the lowest teaser rates and are going to experience the greatest payment increases have little or even negative equity in their homes. Fully 22 percent of the borrowers who borrowed at initial rates of 2.5 percent or less during the past two years have negative equity in their homes, and 40 percent have less than 10 percent equity. The study also finds that a third of people who took out adjustable rate mortgages last year have negative equity and 52 percent have less than 10 percent equity. How is this possible? One reason is that 43 percent of first-time home buyers paid no down payment last year.

If this isn't a housing mania, why have so many people embraced financing schemes that leave them vulnerable to higher interest rates or even a modest correction in home prices? The nation's bank regulators have seen enough and have issued draft rules that will take effect this spring requiring banks to tighten standards on loans where the consumer isn't required to pay principal up front. That's going to tighten credit in the high cost markets, reduce demand for housing and put downward pressure on home prices.

WHILE THE EVIDENCE OF A HOUSING BUBBLE is overwhelming, it isn't definitive. But what isn't debatable is that one cannot forever spend more money than one earns--yet this is exactly what consumers have been doing. For the past five years, Americans have spent more than they have earned--last year, the net borrowing amounted to 3.7 percent of GDP, or over $500 billion. The high level of spending compared with disposable income is also in uncharted territory.

It's no coincidence that the above chart closely tracks the growth in spending financed by mortgage debt, the drop in the savings rate, and the growth in the current account deficit. They all are measuring the same phenomenon--spending outpacing income.

The chart (below, right) shows mortgage equity withdrawal (MEW) as a share of disposable income. MEW comes from three sources. It comes from cash-out refinancing, from home sales where people put down a smaller downpayment for the new house than the equity in the old place, and from home equity loans. According to ISI, a Wall Street research firm where I work, last year MEW amounted to $751 billion, more than 8 percent of disposable income and twice the peak reached in the late 1980s. Alan Greenspan estimates that about half of MEW gets spent, so in 2005 that was about $375 billion. This figure was up from about $306 billion in 2004, which means spending financed by withdrawing home equity added 0.6 percent to GDP in 2005. Add in employment and other factors, and the housing boom has added up to one percentage point to economic growth in each of the past few years.

If this borrowing of home equity remains very high but slows from current levels, which is a near certainty if home prices flatten, it would have a depressing effect on the economy. For example, if home prices stabilize and it takes two years for net mortgage equity withdrawal to slow to $259 billion--the level in 2001--this would subtract two percentage points from economic growth during the next two years. The economy's average growth rate is about 3.5 percent per year, so all else being equal, this would cut economic growth to 2.5 percent.

Then there is the fact that about one-quarter of the job growth since the recession has been directly related to the housing boom, so a flat housing market could slow job creation and reduce economic growth even further. This is what has occurred in Great Britain and Australia, where home prices stabilized after a long boom. In Britain, for example, consumer spending slowed dramatically and GDP growth fell from about 4 percent in 2003 to half that the following year.

Even flat home prices would therefore slow economic growth unless other parts of the economy rapidly accelerate. But a hard landing--meaning a recession--is a real risk. If home prices fall modestly, millions of homeowners will see their equity wiped out. Many of those with the least amount of equity, as we've already shown, are going to face significant increases in their monthly payments. So what has been a virtuous but unsustainable cycle for the economy--higher home prices, more borrowing against home equity, higher spending, increased job creation, even higher home prices--could easily reverse and become a vicious cycle--higher monthly payments, declining home prices, less spending, job losses, foreclosures, even lower home prices.

To be sure, there are some very positive trends in our economy, especially strong productivity, and most likely a housing correction won't push the economy into recession. But even a gradual reversal of the housing boom could result in sluggish economic growth and painful adjustments for those in the bubble areas who incurred too much debt during the run-up in house prices. Conservatives ought to seriously consider these risks so they won't be surprised or caught flat-footed if a housing correction occurs.

Andrew Laperriere is a managing director in the Washington office of ISI Group, a Wall Street economic research and brokerage firm.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; US: Virginia
KEYWORDS: arlingtonva; bahog; bubbaloos; bubbles; doomandgloom; eeyore; fearmongeringfool; hidingunderthetable; housing; housingbubble; isigroup; nar; realestate; syphilliticdementia; theskyisfalling; wereallgonnadie
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To: nopardons
Over the last 60 years, or so, though there have been downturns in the real estate markets, in N.Y.C. and in Chicago, in neither places, has that downturn ever nose dived to a point, where housing prices fell to below what the person had paid for their home.

That was certainly not the case in Massachusetts. $500,000 homes were auctioned off for $190,000 back in the early 90's. The people next door to me paid 250k in the 80's, the market dropped and they had to wait 15 years until the price of their place returned to that level. They were still losing money because the value of the dollar had declined. From what I hear it was even worse in Texas.

I had a tenant who was going to move out and buy one of those 500k houses. She decided not to, fortunately. Can you imagine paying 500k when the people next to you get a similar house for 190k?

161 posted on 04/04/2006 8:24:31 AM PDT by ladyjane
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To: proudpapa
At first monetary inflation is good for everybody (except savers) as it causes asset bubbles like the one discussed here without affecting overall prices too much. Later the inflated currency loses value and prices rise. The bubble cheerleaders will blame rising prices on greedy Arabs, greedy oil companies, the Fed raising rates too much, and other scapegoats. In fact the blame falls mostly on people who go along with the bubble mentality who help create debt and deficits by bidding up real estate and filling their big houses with imported, useless stuff.

The result will ultimately be higher long term rates as foreigners stop subsidizing the dollar. Again, fingers will be wagged and pointed elsewhere. My colleague at work who bought an "investment" property at exactly the wrong time blames "liberals and doom and gloomers" for talking down the market. No, it is really just myopia, greed, and in many cases, an excessive lifestyle.

162 posted on 04/04/2006 8:41:49 AM PDT by palmer (Money problems do not come from a lack of money, but from living an excessive, unrealistic lifestyle)
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To: ex-Texan

save for later


163 posted on 04/04/2006 8:42:36 AM PDT by krunkygirl
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To: A. Pole; narby
Sell now.

He won't. You see, Arizona and in particular Phoenix is the El Dorado. Everybody is moving there and buying one of the new tract mansions they are building. So they are building tens of thousands more to supply that future need and the existing ones will keep rising in price. Phoenix has water everywhere (I think it's called the city of 10,000 lakes) and only a wussy man needs A/C in the summer but there's unlimited supplies of energy for that anyway.

164 posted on 04/04/2006 8:47:04 AM PDT by palmer (Money problems do not come from a lack of money, but from living an excessive, unrealistic lifestyle)
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To: ladyjane

I remember 100k condos going for 30k in Arlington MA. One guy who worked for the town making 30k or something like that had bought about a dozen of them. The whole mess was the primary factor behind the S&L meltdown which we are still paying for.


165 posted on 04/04/2006 8:50:01 AM PDT by palmer (Money problems do not come from a lack of money, but from living an excessive, unrealistic lifestyle)
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To: A. Pole
Sell now.

With people pouring out of California like a sinking ship, I think I'll hang on to my AZ house. Besides, I like it.

You can panic and sell yours.

166 posted on 04/04/2006 8:57:51 AM PDT by narby
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To: palmer
Everybody is moving there and buying one of the new tract mansions they are building.

Actually, yes. There are several "fronts" of new houses being built. The east valley front is about 10 miles wide and progressing about 2 miles/year. The 60 freeway was recently widened, and the Santan freeway is nearing completion to service there.

The west valley is similar. The north and south has limited itself with transportation, so there are new efforts to add freeway capacity.

So they are building tens of thousands more to supply that future need and the existing ones will keep rising in price.

Actually, yes. We're getting the people with money who are fleeing California and think that Phoenix houses are cheap. And we've recently started getting retirees fleeing the hurricanes of Fla.

Phoenix has water everywhere (I think it's called the city of 10,000 lakes)

No, that's Minnesota. It's a long way from here.

Actually, the houses use less water per acre of land than the irrigated farms they replaced. We're pumping water into the aquifer, not out of it.

only a wussy man needs A/C in the summer but there's unlimited supplies of energy for that anyway.

Like those wussy people in Virgina who have heat in the winter. You know anyone without heat in their house?

Actually, they call the energy "nuclear" out here. When California regulated themselves out of electricity a few years ago, we slammed out a dozen new electric plants on the border. We're set.

As for my house, it's a 20 year old view house in an area that will be the future "Beverly Hills" of Phoenix. The price has tripled, and there are only 1200 more acres of open land before we hit Indian reservations and public park land for as far as the car can travel in this direction. So, yeah, I think I'll stay until I'm ready to retire. I think I'd be stupid not to.

167 posted on 04/04/2006 9:15:33 AM PDT by narby
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To: narby
Your house sounds ok. Mine is next to undeveloped land which is next to National Forest. I mainly heat with wood whereas your cooling is partly nuclear, coal and natural gas http://www.aps.com/general_info/AboutAPS_18.html

You could also install solar panels for about 20k which ought to cover your cooling needs. I could build in some passive solar. Your water comes from the Colorado river http://phoenix.gov/WATER/drtfaq.html. I have unlimited well water, even in a drought.

Your real problem, like mine, is housing oversupply. We have the same cheerleaders around here talking about the 200 people who move to this area each day. But that is ending as federal spending peaks. Your influx will taper off too for various reasons. But even before that you will see a dramatic decline in your "investment" tract mansions, Phoenix Housing Market Seen Slowing as "investors" (really get-rich-quick amateurs) bail out. I am outside of the get-rich-quick area, so my house has gone from 175 which I paid to about 225. I don't owe anything and I am grateful that my area wasn't bid up although we will still suffer in the downturn.

168 posted on 04/04/2006 9:38:22 AM PDT by palmer (Money problems do not come from a lack of money, but from living an excessive, unrealistic lifestyle)
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To: palmer
Your real problem, like mine, is housing oversupply.

I've seen housing oversupply, and we don't have it. I was in Houston in the early 80's when the expansion halted and the oil industry died. Entire blocks of houses would be for sale, sometimes for years.

But they still didn't go down in price but perhaps 10%. Once people have mortgages for significant chunks of the valuation, they don't like the idea of paying someone to take the house. The mortgage companies in Houston stuck to their prices too, realizing that if they started reducing the price they'd crash the market and they owned way too many houses to do that. So they held strong.

I expect this market to do the same. The expansion is not ending, and with the immigration problem hitting So. Cal., plus baby boomers retiring in northern climates and moving, plus people fleeing hurricanes in the SE, I don't think it will. I think Phoenix seriously will be the new Los Angeles, and we've only just begun.

169 posted on 04/04/2006 10:12:07 AM PDT by narby
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To: palmer

I couldn't agree with you more.


170 posted on 04/04/2006 10:49:49 AM PDT by proudpapa (of three.)
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To: Dr. Frank fan

There are always housing bubbles, it's just a question of the location of the bubbles.


171 posted on 04/04/2006 10:51:39 AM PDT by dfwgator (Florida Gators - 2006 NCAA Men's Basketball Champions)
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To: narby
With people pouring out of California like a sinking ship, I think I'll hang on to my AZ house. Besides, I like it.

Actually you might be right about AZ. And primary residence is a different thing if you do not have much debt - the price going up or down might be not so relevant for you.

172 posted on 04/04/2006 10:52:11 AM PDT by A. Pole (Solzhenitsyn:"Live Not By Lies" www.columbia.edu/cu/augustine/ arch/solzhenitsyn/livenotbylies.html)
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To: ex-Texan

We sold our house here in WA state on January 2nd of this year. After that time, the market here went SOUTH fast!! People have failed to lower the asking price to match the drop and houses here are NOT SELLING now, after a lava hot market the past few years. Prices are now being forced down if they want to sell. The market is saturated with houses for sale here.


173 posted on 04/04/2006 10:53:12 AM PDT by RetiredArmy (Democrats: The communist, socialist, and Al Qaeda loving party of America.)
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To: RetiredArmy

Here in Phoenix, AZ things have slowed a little, but the market is still very good overall. I watch the houses go up for sale in our NE Phoenix home community and with the exception of 1 really overpriced house, they sell within 3-4 weeks at close to full price. The latest rage here seems to be the multi-level condos/townhouses which START at around $250K and go up depending on the area. Those who borrow foolishly (like interests only loans) will wind up paying for it in the end.


174 posted on 04/04/2006 11:01:53 AM PDT by princess leah
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To: A. Pole

*BINGO* !


175 posted on 04/04/2006 11:38:56 AM PDT by ex-Texan (Matthew 7:1 through 6)
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To: proudpapa
You live in Washington state...what do you REALLY know about the real estate markets in Manhattan and Chicago?

Not only have I lived in both of those cities, I OWNED PROPERTY in them and I know what's going on now, as well! I also know what a real estate BUBBLE actually IS and what it is NOT; unlike you!

Article after article and post after post, by the doom&gloomers here, talk about this mythical REAL ESTATE BUBBLE, as though it was supposedly covering the entire United States. That, alone, should tell you and everyone else, what a fallacy it is. What is true for one area of this nation, is NOT true for ALL areas...and this is no exception.

Are there regions that have real estate "BUBBLES"? Yes, there are and there always have been. But outside of what took place during the GREAT DEPRESSION, there hasn't been a nation wide correction ( and during the GD, ALL prices went spiraling down...not just real estate prices ! ) since.

Your problem, and yes, you DO have one, is that your position on a lack of knowledge and understanding.

176 posted on 04/04/2006 11:58:00 AM PDT by nopardons
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To: proudpapa
I never said that real estate prices wouldn't "EVER" come down in N.Y.C. or Chicago; just that they aren't doing so now. And no, they wont "crash", to a point you imagine that they wioll, unless we have a huge depression.
177 posted on 04/04/2006 12:00:32 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: proudpapa
I never said that real estate prices wouldn't "EVER" come down in N.Y.C. or Chicago; just that they aren't doing so now. And no, they wont "crash", to a point you imagine that they will, unless we have a huge depression.
178 posted on 04/04/2006 12:00:43 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: ladyjane
Did I mention the real estate market in Mass.? NO!
179 posted on 04/04/2006 12:01:58 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: princess leah
After we sold, we moved into a rental home. Nice place, nice neighborhood. Guy next door just put his on the market a few weeks ago. Wanted $316,000 for it. Has already reduced it to $306,000 and it is still not selling. I have not seen anyone come around for the past two or three weekends to look at it. I have a friend who is in the mortgage business and he saw it when he came over to visit. He walked over and got one of the sales flyers and came back to my porch. The first words out of his mouth was, "this house is not going to sell for $306,000. It is way overpriced." I asked him what it should be selling for and he said, "no more than $265,000 to $275,000, TOPS."
180 posted on 04/04/2006 12:02:34 PM PDT by RetiredArmy (Democrats: The communist, socialist, and Al Qaeda loving party of America.)
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