Sunday, April 19, 2015

Housing Peak Ahead


Nearing Peak, U.S. Home Price Gains to Slow, by Jonathan R. Laing, April 18, 2015


The three-year rally in housing prices is losing a little steam but should continue for another year or two. Go figure. Just as several measures of U.S. economic growth appear poised to accelerate, the three-year residential real estate market recovery is showing signs of slowing.

 

Strong job growth, falling unemployment, ultralow mortgage rates, and encouraging consumer confidence figures haven’t been enough to boost monthly sales of existing homes, as tracked by the National Association of Realtors. They’ve been running below their previous annual pace of around five million transactions in recent months, much to the surprise of most experts.

 

Of course, some slowing is to be expected, following their stellar climb from the depths of the financial crisis, when home prices nationally fell 35%, subtracting nearly $8 trillion from Americans’ home equity. More recently, prices rose 8% in 2012, 11% in 2013, and 5% in 2014, much as Barron’s had predicted they would in each of those years. Rising sales in Dallas and Denver, for example, mean houses now cost more than they did back in 2006; and other markets, such as Boston, Charlotte, Portland, and San Francisco, are very close to their peaks, according to figures from Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller.

 

Various housing experts, including Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics, and Lawrence Yun, chief economist at NAR, see solid growth continuing, albeit at a more languid pace of 4% or so this year and next. That would be a little more in line with an expected increase of 2.7% in U.S. output in 2015 and 2016 and rising average wage rates.

 

Helping sustain the recent healthy pace of growth is the strength in housing prices in major cities that don’t include outlying, poorer-performing blue-collar counties and exurbs. For instance, another realty data cruncher, Local Market Monitor, which takes into account an area’s income and employment figures, as well as job and population growth and building-permit activity, sees more boom areas than S&P/Case-Shiller. The company’s founder, Ingo Winzer, says San Francisco, Dallas, Houston, and Denver have all moved to peak valuations, while Honolulu, Nashville, Raleigh, Salt Lake City, Portland, and Seattle also are near or at all-time highs.

 

We think 4% growth in prices is a reasonable expectation over the next year or two, particularly in light of the strange dichotomy between economic and housing data that could prevent more rapid increases. While the split between a gradually rising rate of economic growth and a gradually slowing housing market is unlikely to result in a dramatic immediate change in housing prices in the next couple of years, it’s enough to raise questions about whether a more important, longer-term shift is under way.

 

Looking out a little further, say to 2017-2019, Bank of America Merrill Lynch mortgage-backed securities strategist Chris Flanagan sees the possibility that home prices could start to decline. By then, he says, prices will be subject to slowing growth in buyers’ disposable income and the inevitable end in speculative purchases by professional investors.

 

Among other causes for concern: Housing starts, as reported by the Commerce Department, have been in a deep funk ever since the U.S. housing bust and Great Recession hit with such ferocity in 2007. They sank from an annual pace of more than two million in the 2004-2006 period to around 500,000 in 2009. They’ve bounced back since, but can’t seem to get much over the hump of one million a year, even though population growth and immigration alone would seemingly dictate construction of at least 1.4 million homes annually. And much of the revival owes to multifamily construction, largely for rentals, rather than single-family housing. In fact, multifamily construction, at around 350,000 homes a year, is now at the pre-bust level.

 

“There’s no question the housing recovery is beginning to falter some,” observes David Blitzer, chairman of the index committee of S&P Dow Jones Indices and the keeper of the all-important S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price family of indexes. “Anytime in the past, when housing starts came in at the current annual pace of one million new homes, the economy was in recession.”

 

Obviously, the U.S. is not in recession today. Adds Blitzer: “One wonders whether these days something has changed in Americans’ attitude towards homeownership—the dream house in the suburbs with a white picket fence.”

 

RESEARCHERS AT REAL-ESTATE data keeper CoreLogic estimate that, through February, prices in 26 states and the District of Columbia had rallied within 10% of their all-time highs, and New York, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Wyoming, Texas, and Colorado had hit new peaks. But as impressive as the rebound was through February, the signs of a slowing pace in residential housing now are equally apparent.

 

One theory holds that growing income inequality has stymied the millennial generation (folks born between 1982 and 2000) from playing the same role in energizing the housing market as did their parents and grandparents. This is the most populous generation of potential home buyers. Yet the millennials have largely been missing in action in the home market, forced by college-debt burdens and sketchy incomes to double up in apartments or remain in their parents’ basements rather than form and head new households.

 

Nor is much inventory available for the first-time home buyer, even if he or she has the wherewithal. New-home construction since the bust has largely been concentrated in the “move-up” or luxury segments of the market, rather than in the starter strata, according to Sterne Agee home-building analyst Jay McCanless. This is only underlined by the latest Commerce Department figures, which show that the median new home in February sold for $275,500, compared with $202,600 for the median existing home.

 

Likewise, not much is available for the first-time buyer in the existing-home market. There’s less distressed merchandise—homes in foreclosure or late-stage delinquency—than there was a few years back, now that opportunistic private-equity firms have scarfed up much of this excess inventory. In addition, 27% of the owners of the lowest-priced third of U.S. homes remain in negative equity (owing more on their mortgage than the value of the dwelling), making them reluctant to do anything, according to a recent Zillow report.

 

As a consequence, says NAR economist Yun, first-time buyers—millennial or otherwise—have sunk to 28% of purchasers of existing homes; the normal historical level is 40%. Without a strong cadre of first-time buyers, the entire residential real estate ecosystem stagnates. Move-up activity languishes because not enough people are buying their first homes, allowing others to purchase more expensive digs.

 

Likewise, future home price growth figures to be tempered by continuing tightness in mortgage credit. True, the government in recent months has tried to entice more lending to first-timers. For example, for folks with strong credit, it has cut mortgage down-payment requirements, to just 3% from 20%, on loans that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac guarantee.

 

But lenders aren’t loosening credit standards much, either to mortgage borrowers or smaller home builders, who in the past supplied much of the starter-home inventory. And who can blame them? Moody’s Zandi estimates that lenders suffered catastrophic losses approaching $150 billion in the wake of the housing bust from mortgage putbacks, government fines, and legal costs arising from their allegedly defective mortgages.

 

Affordability will be a growing problem for housing. Existing and new-home prices have been rising faster than average U.S. incomes for the past three years, effectively pricing lots of buyers out of the market. Rents also have been going up sharply in recent years—more than 3% annually in the U.S. and over 7% in especially desirable locations, such as San Francisco or the boroughs of Manhattan and Brooklyn in New York City.

 

STILL, RENTING REMAINS the more attractive alternative for many, even with the tax breaks that homeowners garner through the deductibility of mortgage interest and property taxes. According to Sam Khater, deputy chief economist at CoreLogic, the ratio of home prices to rent (the owner’s equivalent rent number used in the consumer price index) indicates that homes are still about 30% over-valued, compared with the more normal markets of the 1990s—an era before prices went into the stratosphere.

 

Also negatively affecting affordability will be the rising mortgage rates that will inevitably follow the Federal Reserve’s “normalization” of short-term interest rates, probably beginning later this year. By 2017, mortgage rates may well be two full percentage points higher than the current 30-year fixed-rate average of about 3.7%, predicts Zandi. “That would still be a bargain, assuming that the economy continues to strengthen and U.S. incomes rise briskly,” he contends. We can only wonder on the latter score.

 

Many potential buyers could be priced out of existing markets unless construction of new homes picks up markedly. New construction of about a half-million single-family units annually is dwarfed by yearly sales of around five million existing single-family houses, town homes, condominiums, and co-ops, according to NAR. However, unsold inventories of existing homes will remain constrained unless new construction cranks up.

 

Inventories expand only when sellers of existing homes buy newly built homes, or rent while putting their own dwellings on the market. If they buy another existing home, there’s no change in inventory. In the latest monthly NAR report, inventories stood at an unhealthily low 4.6 months at current sales levels. At least six months is considered a healthy inventory.

 

ALTHOUGH CUMULATIVE PRICE GAINS are expected to top 20% in many big cities over the next three years, some observers see a secular change in Americans’ attitude toward homeownership. This new meme is possibly reflected in the latest government report showing that ownership has fallen to a 20-year low of 64% of the nation’s roughly 120 million households; the rest rent. The peak was 69.4% in the bubble year of 2004, when any American who wanted a mortgage could find financing with no inconvenient questions asked about net worth or income. Since then, the rental market has grown by eight million households, while homeownership has dropped by two million.

 

Of course, much of this shift to rentals was a matter of necessity. Folks who lost their homes to foreclosure had little alternative but to rent. Yet, clearly, not all renters lack the resources to make a 20% down payment and carry a mortgage. The decision to rent can be a lifestyle choice that affords many a millennial or empty nester easy access to attractive, culturally vibrant city centers, for example.

 

Chicago real-estate mogul Sam Zell long ago made a big bet on the U.S. rental market. When his real-estate investment trust Equity Residential (EQR) went public in 1993, it owned garden-apartment complexes in suburban areas. But over the succeeding two decades, it shifted to central-city apartment buildings to exploit the tidal wave of young professionals moving from the suburbs into the “bright lights, big cities” environment. Equity Residential now boasts some 400 apartment buildings with more than 100,000 residential units, in Boston, Miami, New York, Washington, San Francisco, and Seattle.

 

“The American Dream for the under-40 crowd today isn’t so much the house in the suburbs, but more the convenience of city living, where commutes are short and cultural and entertainment amenities are nearby,” he tells Barron’s. “Renting is a heck of a bargain, with homeowner property taxes soaring in both the ’burbs and central cities. Likewise, the proliferation of private schools in various cities makes the move to homes in the suburbs for families with school-age kids less of a necessity,” says Zell.

 

Louis Conforti, a principal with the global real-estate investment firm Colony Capital, claims that a change in the zeitgeist has developed among younger adults, driving them to rentals. He dubs the change “Uberization.” Conforti explains: “Just as many feel it’s silly to own a car when you can have a fleet at your disposal with the click of the computer, why pinch pennies to save for a mortgage down payment, rather than rent an abode, when you have no idea where you may be working in five years’ time.”

 

To some extent, he’s talking his book. Colony, like Blackstone Group (BX), was an avid buyer of distressed properties during the downturn and then put them out to rent. The firm now owns 20,000 homes in Phoenix, Las Vegas, Atlanta, and Denver and has enjoyed strong financial results in its portfolio.

 

FEW OBSERVERS HAVE as acute an understanding of the residential market as Yale economist and Nobel Laureate Robert Shiller. He was co-creator of the Case Shiller home price indexes and has done extensive academic research on housing prices in the U.S. and abroad. When we chatted recently by phone, Shiller evinced concern about the prospects for homeownership in the U.S.

 

First, he said, many buyers during the boom years, aided and abetted by real estate industry cheerleaders, made the mistake of regarding homes as an asset class, like stocks or bonds. This is clearly not the case. Homes, in fact, are a consumption item that depreciates, albeit at a much slower pace than, say, cars, requiring much upkeep spending to hold value. In fact, about the best one can expect in home appreciation over the long term is to match inflation. That’s what a study of U.S. home prices from 1890 to 1990 showed. Actually, Shiller found that prices outpaced inflation by a trivial 10 basis points (a tenth of a percentage point) annually.

 

As a behavioral economist, Shiller puts much stock in the annual surveys he does of American attitudes toward homeownership. And these surveys betray growing levels of anxiety. Americans no longer expect lush annual gains in home values. And reading between the lines of the survey responses, Shiller detects reluctance on the part of many to shoulder the long-term commitment that a home requires. “People are clearly beset by insecurity over their careers, both as a result of globalization and job displacement by computers,” he observes. “We live in a world of first-mover advantage and a winner-take-all economy that makes people fearful.”

 

The future course of home prices is immensely important to the U.S.

 

Residential real estate accounted for $23 trillion of Americans’ total 2014 year-end net worth of $83 trillion, according to the Fed, affecting people across the entire income scale. That wealth looks likely to rise in the next year or two, but its longer-term prospects are much less assured.

 


 

Comments

Home ownership is still viable in most places and home equity is one of the safer investments given the bubbles everywhere in other investment options.  The well paid 40-somethings are still moving to the nice subdivisions and finding workable public schools.  New college grads are not inundated with job offers, so there may be a dearth of home buyers later. It all depends on whether or not we can stop excessive immigration and improve job availability. It’s hard for me to imagine why the housing industry has joined the Chamber of Communists to champion excessive immigration.  Most of the immigrants we are getting are going on welfare.

Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader

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