The Housing Crisis is Over
May 14, 2008 by Trevor Hammond
This is an
article that has been circulating at the top levels of some banking
institutions…
The
Housing Crisis Is Over
By CYRIL MOULLE-BERTEAUX
The Wall Street Journal
May 6, 2008; Page A23
The dire headlines coming fast and furious in the
financial and popular press suggest that the housing crisis is intensifying.
Yet it is very likely that April 2008 will mark the bottom of the U.S. housing
market. Yes, the housing market is bottoming right now.
How can this be? For starters, a bottom does not mean
that prices are about to return to the heady days of 2005. That probably won't
happen for another 15 years. It just means that the trend is no longer getting
worse, which is the critical factor.
Most people forget that the current housing bust is
nearly three years old. Home sales peaked in July 2005. New home sales are down
a staggering 63% from peak levels of 1.4 million. Housing starts have fallen
more than 50% and, adjusted for population growth, are back to the trough
levels of 1982.
Furthermore, residential construction is close to
15-year lows at 3.8% of GDP; by the fourth quarter of this year, it will
probably hit the lowest level ever. So what's going to stop the housing
decline? Very simply, the same thing that caused the bust: affordability.
The boom made housing unaffordable for many American
families, especially first-time home buyers. During the 1990s and early 2000s,
it took 19% of average monthly income to service a conforming mortgage on the
average home purchased. By 2005 and 2006, it was absorbing 25% of monthly
income. For first time buyers, it went from 29% of income to 37%. That just
proved to be too much.
Prices got so high that people who intended to
actually live in the houses they purchased (as opposed to speculators) stopped
buying. This caused the bubble to burst.
Since then, house prices have fallen 10%-15%, while
incomes have kept growing (albeit more slowly recently) and mortgage rates have
come down 70 basis points from their highs. As a result, it now takes 19% of monthly
income for the average home buyer, and 31% of monthly income for the first-time
home buyer, to purchase a house. In other words, homes on average are back to
being as affordable as during the best of times in the 1990s. Numerous
households that had been priced out of the market can now afford to get in.
The next question is: Even if home sales pick up, how
can home prices stop falling with so many houses vacant and unsold? The flip
but true answer: because they always do.
In the past five major housing market corrections (and
there were some big ones, such as in the early 1980s when home sales also fell
by 50%-60% and prices fell 12%-15% in real terms), every time home sales
bottomed, the pace of house-price declines halved within one or two months.
The explanation is that by the time home sales stop
declining, inventories of unsold homes have usually already started falling in
absolute terms and begin to peak out in "months of supply" terms.
That's the case right now: New home inventories peaked at 598,000 homes in July
2006, and stand at 482,000 homes as of the end of March. This inventory is
equivalent to 11 months of supply, a 25-year high – but it is similar to 1974,
1982 and 1991 levels, which saw a subsequent slowing in home-price declines within
the next six months.
Inventories are declining because construction
activity has been falling for such a long time that home completions are now
just about undershooting new home sales. In a few months, completions of new
homes for sale could be undershooting new home sales by 50,000-100,000
annually.
Inventories will drop even faster to 400,000 – or
seven months of supply – by the end of 2008. This shift in inventories will
have a significant impact on prices, although house prices won't stop falling
entirely until inventories reach five months of supply sometime in 2009. A
five-month supply has historically signaled tightness in the housing market.
Many pundits claim that house prices need to fall
another 30% to bring them back in line with where they've been historically.
This is usually based on an analysis of house prices adjusted for inflation:
Real house prices are 30% above their 40-year, inflation-adjusted average, so
they must fall 30%. This simplistic analysis is appealing on the surface, but
is flawed for a variety of reasons.
Most importantly, it neglects the fact that a great
majority of Americans buy their houses with mortgages. And if one buys a house
with a mortgage, the most important factor in deciding what to pay for the house
is how much of one's income is required to be able to make the mortgage
payments on the house. Today the rate on a 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage is
5.7%. Back in 1981, the rate hit 18.5%. Comparing today's house prices to the
1970s or 1980s, when mortgage rates were stratospheric, is misguided and
misleading.
This is all good news for the broader economy. The
housing bust has been subtracting a full percentage point from GDP for almost
two years now, which is very large for a sector that represents less than 5% of
economic activity.
When the rate of house-price declines halves, there
will be a wholesale shift in markets' perceptions. All of a sudden, the
expected value of the collateral (i.e. houses) for much of the lending that
went on for the past decade will change. Right now, when valuing the
collateral, market participants including banks are extrapolating the current
pace of house price declines for another two to three years; this has a
significant impact on the amount of delinquencies, foreclosures and credit
losses that lenders are expected to face.
More home sales and smaller price declines means fewer
homeowners will be underwater on their mortgages. They will thus have less
incentive to walk away and opt for foreclosure.
A milder house-price decline scenario could lead to
increases in the market value of a lot of the securitized mortgages that have
been responsible for $300 billion of write-downs in the past year. Even if
write-backs do not occur, stabilizing collateral values will have a huge impact
on the markets' perception of risk related to housing, the financial system,
and the economy.
We are of course experiencing a serious housing bust,
with serious economic consequences that are still unfolding. The odds are that
the reverberations will lead to sub-trend growth for a couple of years.
Nonetheless, housing led us into this credit crisis and this recession. It is
likely to lead us out. And that process is underway, right now.
Mr. Moulle-Berteaux is managing partner of Traxis
Partners LP, a hedge fund firm based in New
York.
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