by Calculated Risk on 6/19/2006 04:42:00 PM
Monday, June 19, 2006
Budget Lies
I just added a post to Angry Bear: Budget Metrics and the Cheating Clotheshorse
The bottom line: Bush has made no progress on the budget deficit.
NAHB: Builder Confidence Falls to 11 Year Low
by Calculated Risk on 6/19/2006 01:27:00 PM
The National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) reports: Builder Confidence Declines In June (update: add graph)
Click on graph for larger image.
The [Housing Market Index] HMI declined four points from an upwardly revised reading in the previous month to hit 42 for the latest report, its lowest mark since April 1995.
"Based on historical experience, particularly the 1994-95 episode, the pronounced pattern of movement in the HMI is not inconsistent with the reasonably orderly cooling-down process we’re projecting for home sales and single-family housing starts in 2006,” said NAHB Chief Economist David Seiders. “We now expect new-home sales to be off by 13 percent from the record posted in 2005. Single-family starts, supported by large builder backlogs of unfilled orders and some continuing reconstruction in the wake of last year’s hurricanes, should be down by about 9 percent from the 2005 record."
"These forecasts naturally are subject to a considerable degree of risk," added Seiders. "The downside risks include the potential for large numbers of sales cancellations and re-sales by the investor/speculator group as well as more aggressive tightening of monetary policy than we’re assuming in our baseline forecast."
...
All three component indexes declined in June, falling to their lowest levels since early 1995. The index gauging current sales was down three points to 47, while the index gauging sales expectations for the next six months fell five points to 50 and the index gauging traffic of prospective buyers declined four points, to 29.
The decline in builder confidence was broad-based and registered in every region this month. The HMI fell seven points to 40 in the Northeast, four points to 25 in the Midwest, two points to 49 in the South and one point to 61 in the West. These regional indexes are all down by similar amounts from their 1995 highs, and the relatively low levels for the Midwest and Northeast reflect relatively weak economic conditions in those parts of the country.
Sunday, June 18, 2006
Housing: "Fear" Grips Arizona
by Calculated Risk on 6/18/2006 10:38:00 PM
The Arizona Republic reports: How low will it go?
Greed drove metropolitan Phoenix's home prices and sales to new records in 2005. Fear is driving the market this year.An excellent article.
...
"There's a psychological umbrella of fear in Phoenix's housing market now," said Tim Sullivan, a national housing analyst with San Diego-based Sullivan Group. "Buyers are uncertain."
...
With the housing industry accounting for at least one of every three dollars generated in the Valley's economy, any slowdown will hurt. Consumers will be particularly vulnerable: Analysts say the demand for Valley homes and housing prices both were hyperinflated by 25 to 30 percent last year, mostly because of investors.
"My sense is the worst is behind us, and the housing market will have stabilized with smaller jumps in listings and more steady sales by October," said John Foltz, president of Realty Executives.Maybe. But I think this is just the beginning ...
Friday, June 16, 2006
Krugman: Housing Slowdown and Inflation
by Calculated Risk on 6/16/2006 01:30:00 PM
Paul Krugman writes: The Phantom Menace (NYTimes pay)
"It would be an exaggeration to say that there's no inflation threat at all. I can think of ways in which inflation could become a problem. But it's much easier to think of ways in which the Federal Reserve, wrongly focused on the phantom menace of a new wage-price spiral, could be slow to respond to bigger threats, like a rapidly deflating housing bubble."So far the housing bubble is not deflating rapidly. But I do think a housing slowdown is a greater threat to the economy than inflation.
Krugman writes:
So I don't fear inflation nearly as much as I fear the fear of inflation. And I wish the Fed would lighten up on the subject.But by talking about inflation, perhaps the Fed can lessen the fear of inflation. So I think the Fed is correct to talk openly about inflation concerns.
For excerpts of Dr. Krugman's column, see Economist's View.
Thursday, June 15, 2006
Harvard on Housing
by Calculated Risk on 6/15/2006 06:29:00 PM
Harvard's Joint Center for Housing Studies last week released a new report on housing: State of the Nation's Housing 2006. The report suggests that a "soft landing" is likely for housing, mostly because other factors are not present (loss of employment and overbuilding).
... when and if house prices do fall, the so-called bubble is more likely to deflate slowly rather than burst suddenly. History suggests that appreciation eases for a year or two before prices come down in nominal terms. While dips of a few percentage points are common, nominal house prices rarely drop by 10 percent or more.
Still, over the past 30 years, nominal house prices have in fact fallen by five percent or more at least once in about half of the nation’s 75 largest metros. In most cases, it takes significant job losses—or a combination of overbuilding, modest job losses and population outflows—to drive house prices down substantially. In terms of magnitude, price declines associated with episodes of major job losses alone average 4.5 percent, while those occurring in and around periods of overbuilding alone average 8.3 percent (Figure 11).
emphasis added
Click on graph for larger image.
Figure 11 shows historical price drops associated with minor and major job loss and overbuilding,
However, one of the co-authors of the Harvard study, Rachel Drew, was quoted in Business Week: A Soft Landing for Housing?
Drew notes that the Harvard study was based on the state of the market at the end of 2005 and admits her optimism has been tempered a bit by the slowdown that's occurred so far this year. "The first-quarter numbers showed the housing market slowing a little faster than we expected," she readily admits. But for the most part, she stands by the conclusions of the report.Overall I think the Harvard study is reasonable, however I think the price declines will be more significant than JCHS expects. There are several reasons for my pessimism: 1) Housing is now a larger portion of the US economy than in previous periods. So a housing slowdown will have a larger ripple effect on the overall economy. 2) As noted in the report, homeowners have been extracting equity from their homes to maintain their lifestyles. As housing prices flatten out and start to decline, this mortgage equity withdrawal will slow, impacting consumer spending. and 3) there has been significant speculation and the use of leverage to purchase homes in recent years (the exotic or nontraditional loans). This will probably lead to more foreclosures and lower prices.
As Harvard noted: "[historically] appreciation eases for a year or two before prices come down in nominal terms". What Harvard didn't add is the nominal declines are historically slow and steady over a multi-year period.
“Actually, what we are seeing is a very typical slowdown in the market so far—there is nothing particularly soft about it (the landing in bubble markets). The claim is that because unit sales are falling but prices are still going up, that this is an unusual slowing. The fact is that most breaking markets start with activity, and it takes three to four quarters for that to take all the wind out of price appreciation. How hard it will be, remains to be seen.”UCLA's Dr. Christopher Thornberg (from Smart money is leaving the real estate market)
The June FED Debate Appears Over
by Calculated Risk on 6/15/2006 12:10:00 PM
For Fed Watchers, the question is now what happens in August?
Images from the Cleveland Fed.
Wednesday, June 14, 2006
Beige Book on Housing
by Calculated Risk on 6/14/2006 02:14:00 PM
From the Fed's Beige Book Summary:
Residential real estate markets continued to cool across much of the country--with most Districts reporting slower homebuilding and sales of existing homes. In contrast, commercial real estate activity continued to strengthen in most Districts. A few reports noted concern about too much building.
Some softening of the market for existing homes was reported by ten Districts--Chicago, Cleveland, Dallas, Kansas City, Philadelphia, Minneapolis, New York, Richmond, St. Louis, and San Francisco. Dallas and Richmond noted that activity remained quite strong, and Chicago reported slowing from high levels. San Francisco reports hot housing markets in Utah and parts of the Pacific Northwest. Several Districts said sales had weakened for some of the most expensive homes, except in the Dallas District where demand for lower-priced homes "had dipped noticeably." Atlanta reported that residential sales were near year-ago levels in most parts of the District, but that sales weakened and inventories increased in Florida. The Philadelphia District said sales of homes in resort areas have declined sharply. The New York District reports a sharp deceleration in prices in the suburbs around New York City, but a tightening of the Manhattan rental markets.
Homebuilding slowed in most Districts--Chicago, Cleveland, Dallas, Kansas City, New York, Philadelphia, St. Louis, and San Francisco. The New York District reported that some homebuilders in New Jersey are withdrawing from the authorization process and allowing their options to build to expire, noting that increases in fuel and materials costs are pinching profits. Homebuilders in the Atlanta District reported that single-family home construction was near year-ago levels in most parts of the District, except in Florida, where sales slowed. The Atlanta District also reported that Florida condominium sales continued to weaken and several projects were cancelled.
MBA: Mortgage Application Volume Up
by Calculated Risk on 6/14/2006 08:44:00 AM
The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) reports: Mortgage Applications Increase by 7 Percent in Latest Survey
Click on graph for larger image.
The Market Composite Index, a measure of mortgage loan application volume, was 571.9, an increase of 7 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis from 534.4 one week earlier. On an unadjusted basis, the Index increased 17.9 percent compared with the previous week but was down 34.3 percent compared with the same week one year earlier.Mortgage rates increased slightly:
The seasonally-adjusted Purchase Index increased by 4.8 percent to 414.6 from 395.6 the previous week and the Refinance Index increased by 10.6 percent to 1499.4 from 1356.0 one week earlier.
The average contract interest rate for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages increased to 6.61 percent from 6.60 percent ...Change in mortgage applications from one year ago (from Dow Jones):
The average contract interest rate for one-year ARMs increased to 6.09 percent from 6.05 percent ...
Total | -34.3% |
Purchase | -21.1% |
Refi | -49.5% |
Fixed-Rate | -34.1% |
ARM | -34.6% |
Although mortgage activity picked up slightly this week, Purchase activity is off over 20% from 2005.
Tuesday, June 13, 2006
San Diego Home Prices Decline
by Calculated Risk on 6/13/2006 07:08:00 PM
The San Diego Union reports: San Diego County home prices take a tumble
The median price of all homes sold in May was $490,000, down $15,000 from April, although it was still slightly higher than a year ago.DataQuick will report on all of California over the next couple of days.
Sales slowed for the 23rd straight month on a year-over-year basis, reaching 4,217 transactions in new and existing homes and condos.
Local real estate agents reported about seven months' worth of unsold inventory, but argued that the pace of activity reflects a normal market rather than a crash.
Housing Slowdown and Employment
by Calculated Risk on 6/13/2006 02:24:00 PM
From CNNMoney: Housing slowdown could hurt construction jobs
"Although construction employers expect to hire at a brisk pace again during the third quarter, hiring in this sector has inched downward throughout 2006," said Jeffrey A. Joerres, Chairman & CEO of Manpower Inc. "There is rampant speculation about the state of the housing market, and these survey results are another piece of evidence that point toward a cooling trend."This is just the beginning of the impact on employment from the housing slowdown. I expect employers will be optimistic about the "next quarter" during the entire down trend.
According to the survey, construction employers "in the West have the strongest hiring plans, while those in the Midwest report considerably weaker staffing expectations."
Manpower President of North America Jonas Prising added, "It's the only sector in the survey with a distinguishable tick downward. We may be seeing some of the housing backlog come to an end."
Also, Reuteres reports: Freddie Mac sees slowdown in U.S. housing market
U.S. mortgage finance company Freddie Mac said on Tuesday that rising interest rates would lead to a slowdown in the U.S housing market but added it did not expect the market to crash.I also don't think there will be a "crash"; I expect housing prices to decline in real terms over several years.
"Rising interest rates will lead to a slowdown in the U.S. housing market," said Chief Executive Richard Syron, speaking to Reuters in Paris where he was on a business engagement.
"We do not think that there will be a crash. We think that by and large, overall, nationally, there will be a material slowing of the rate of appreciation of housing prices, but not an absolute decline," he added.