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Monday, June 13, 2005

Harvard on Housing: "Desperation" Buying

by Calculated Risk on 6/13/2005 07:17:00 PM

Harvard's Joint Center for Housing Studies released a new report: "State of the Nation's Housing 2005". From a story in the Union Tribune:

"Desperation is driving people," said Nicolas Retsinas, director of Harvard's Joint Center for Housing Studies. "They think, 'If I don't get it now, I will never get it.' People are not looking at what they are going to have to pay over the long term. They are asking what is the lowest possible payment I have to make over the next 12 months so I can get in."

In high-cost markets such as San Diego County, most purchases are made with adjustable-interest-rate loans, he noted. The greater buying power such "creative" loans offer is offset by the increased risk of default.

In the priciest metropolitan real estate markets, assuming greater risk is becoming the norm, Retsinas said.

"Although interest-only and adjustable loans can initially save a typical home buyer hundreds of dollars in monthly payments, these loans also leave borrowers vulnerable to sharply higher payments when interest rates adjust or principal payments start to become due."

Click on chart for larger image.

One of the startling statistics is that homebuyers' costs have soared in recent years, despite the record low interest rates and use of Interest Only ARMs.

From a SmartMoney.com review: Get Ready for a Housing Slowdown:

"We want to be sure people are aware that, notwithstanding these past few years, buying a house is not a risk-less investment...this is clearly near the apex of the cycle," says Nicolas Retsinas, director of Harvard's Joint Center for Housing Studies.

To be clear, Retsinas isn't predicting a nationwide housing crisis. Indeed, 77 of the 110 largest metro areas show no affordability troubles and would likely be untouched if the housing bubble popped in the hottest markets, says Retsinas.
And a less optimistic view:
Mark Weisbrot, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, a Washington, D.C.-based think tank, says there's clearly a bubble in the housing market, and that when it bursts it will likely cause a national recession worse than the one following the stock market bubble. In 2001, the strong housing market tempered the downturn. This time, he says, it's difficult to imagine anything that could ease the pain.

Even those markets that didn't experience the huge run-up could be affected. Weisbrot says home prices in those areas won't fall drastically, but the local economies will suffer, as was the case when the stock market popped. And this will eventually dampen demand for housing.

As for first-time home buyers, Weisbrot sees no reason why they should jump in now — particularly with rentals so affordable by comparison. The risks, he says, are so high that he can't understand why anyone would take the gamble.

"Buying a home now in any of the bubble areas is very much like what it was like buying into the Nasdaq," he says. "You could get lucky and it could keep growing [for a little longer], but you are also taking a big risk."