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As evidence mounts that the real estate boom has finally peaked, most economists,
analysts, and industry professionals continue to predict simply a slowing of
price increases, or perhaps, modest price dips. Apparently they have taken
comfort from the irrelevant fact other than during the "Great Depression" there
has never been a year in which national real estate prices declined. While
this ignores significant national price declines in other wealthy nations,
as well as several noteworthy regional declines in the U.S. itself, it ignores
the unprecedented run up in prices and credit excesses of the last six years.
In fact, when it comes to real estate, this is one of the rare examples where
this time it really is different.
Historically, national housing prices have increased no faster than the annual
rate of inflation, as measured by the CPI. Though recent changes to that index,
and several short-term anomalies, have resulted in the CPI underestimating
inflation, the recent run up in real estate prices is still unprecedented even
if one assumes inflation is double the official estimates. To expect the pendulum
to swing so far in one direction, without completing a equal move in the opposite,
is a leap of faith as extraordinary as the bubble itself.
To understand why the current real estate market is different, one must examine
the unique circumstances that produced the bubble in the first place. Historically,
many factors have combined to keep national real estate prices in check. However,
due to a confluence of events, those traditional restraints have been temporarily
removed, making the unprecedented price increases experienced during the last
six years possible. To their own hazard, the public has largely accepted arguments
from partisan real estate boosters justifying absurd prices as resulting from
legitimate market fundamentals (See my commentary entitled" Housing Bulls Inadvertently
Support the Bearish Case" written Dec. 13, 2004 http://www.europac.net/archives.asp?year=2004&qtr=4#.
) However, as those restraints gradually return, and true market fundamentals
reassert themselves, a price collapse is inevitable.
The recent run-up in home prices began during the latter stages of the 1990s
stock market bubble, and kicked into high gear almost precisely when that bubble
began to deflate. It is not without coincidence that the speculative fever
born in the stock market mania seamlessly found new life in real estate. However,
were it not for the irresponsible actions and omissions of the Federal Reserve,
the Federal Government, Wall Street, and the mortgage industry itself, such
speculation never could have produced the unprecedented national bubble just
experienced.
The following is a list of those traditional safeguards that prevented national
real estate bubbles from forming in the past, the abandonment of which has
made this historically unprecedented bubble possible:
The Government
The Fed
In an attempt to postpone the painful but necessary correction of the economic
imbalances developed during the tech bubble, the Fed dropped interest rates
to levels unprecedented in post-war America, and completely inconsistent with
our nation's low level of savings. Such actions not only temporarily reduced
the cost of home ownership, but mortgage refinancing simultaneously enabled
a greater share of household incomes to become available for other consumer
spending, keeping recessionary forces at bay. The lower cost of home ownership,
together with the artificial, short-term boost to the economy it provided,
combined to enable homebuyers to bid up real estate prices.
Congress and the White House
In the aftermath of the bursting of the tech bubble and the tragedy of September
11th, the Bush Administration and the Republican controlled Congress did not
want the painful, yet extremely necessary recession occurring on their watch.
Though the problems actually developed during the Clinton years, public perception
confused that mania with legitimate prosperity. Rather then exposing the false
nature of the boom and preparing the public for the painful, yet necessary
bust that lay ahead, the Administration and Congress enacted a series of irresponsible
tax cuts and spending increases. These measures succeeded in postponing the
inevitable and exacerbated the severity of the adjustment that would ultimately
be required. Also, exempting the first $500,000 in profits from home sales
from tax (provided owners reside in their properties for two years) increased
the after-tax gains on real estate speculation, further feeding the speculative
appetites of homebuyers.
FannieMae and FreddieMac
By insuring increasingly risky mortgages under the presumption of an implied
Federal Government guarantee, FannieMae and FreddieMac enabled the origination,
resale, and securitizations of mortgages, which otherwise never would have
been possible. The moral hazard inherent in separating lenders from the ultimate
holders of the paper results in the irresponsible extension of mortgage credit,
to non-creditworthy borrowers, on liberal terms and with insufficient collateral,
fueling the speculative run-up in housing prices.
The Mortgage Tax Deduction (Not a factor unique to this time period, but
a powerful force artificially increasing home prices for years.)
By subsidizing homeownership, the government artificially increases home prices.
Rather than making homes more affordable, the mortgage deduction ironically
makes them more expensive. (This point has been proven by the mortgage industry's
lobbying efforts against the recently proposed changes in the tax code limiting
mortgage deductions. Their principal argument: the move would cause home prices
to collapse.) Sure those who quality for the tax deduction can write-off the
mortgage interest they pay, but thanks to the subsidy those mortgages are a
lot larger than they would be otherwise. Like all government subsidies, such
as those to education and health care, the cost of what is being subsidized
actually rises. In the case of student loans, the benefits go to institutions
that benefit from higher tuitions, which in the absence of government guaranteed
loans would be impossibly high. For their part, the students are burdened with
staggering amounts of debt. In the case of health care, it is the medical establishment
that has largely benefited by the separation of medical costs from those paying
the bills. Such separation makes ever-increasing prices possible. In the case
of housing, it is realtors and mortgage lenders that benefit from higher commissions
and fees on inflated home prices, more frequent transactions, and larger mortgage
balances.
The Mortgage Industry
Down Payments
Historically, housing price increases were restrained by the ability of buyers
to come up with the required twenty percent down payment. As a result, housing
prices could advance no faster than the typical family's ability to save. The
existence of a twenty percent down payment limited the risks associated with
default by: 1) restricting home mortgages to those who demonstrated the financial
discipline to save; 2) limiting mortgages to those with a demonstrative ability
to handle the responsibilities and costs of homeownership; 3) requiring buyers
to have some "skin in the game;" and 4) providing an adequate cushion for lenders
should foreclosure occur. With the twenty percent down payment now passé,
this limitation on price appreciation has been removed, along with the protection
it provided lenders.
Documentation
Traditionally, lenders naturally wanted borrowers to fully document their
financial capability to repay a loan, including proof of employment, income,
financial assets, and credit history. As a result, the ability of borrowers
to exaggerate their financial positions in order to qualify for mortgages was
held in check. With the advent of the "no-documentation" mortgage that check
has gone out some very highly leveraged windows. In addition, the allure of
quick profits from real estate appreciation, and the ease of extracting those
profits through cash-out refinancing, provided homebuyers not only with a substantial
incentive to lie, but the means to get away with it. As more buyers gained
access to mortgage credit by misrepresenting their financial conditions, home
prices were bid much higher than would have been possible had full documentation
been required.
Fully-amortized mortgages
With traditional thirty-year, fixed-rate mortgages, borrowers actually had
to have enough income not only to pay the interest on their loans, but to repay
the principal as well. The existence of interest-only and negative amortization
loans has resulted in loans being made to borrowers who have no ability to
repay them. Enabling people to buy houses they can not afford has artificially
increased housing demand, exerting upward pressure on prices.
Adjustable rate mortgages
Traditional fixed-rate mortgages leave lenders holding the risks should interest
rates rise. Adjustable rate mortgages transfer those risks to borrowers in
exchange for lower initial payments, which borrowers have used to take on larger
mortgages than they otherwise could afford, using the difference to bid up
home prices. However, both parties have completely ignored the harsh reality
that when higher monthly mortgage payments ultimately arrive, many borrowers
will be unable to afford them. (See my commentary "In Arms Way, written May
7th 2004 http://www.europac.net/archives.asp?year=2004&qtr=2#)
Payment and debt to income levels
Historically lenders have not allowed borrowers to devote more than one third
of their incomes to meeting mortgage payments, property taxes, and other costs
directly attributable to homeownership. During the current bubble lenders routinely
allow such payments to consume as much as half of a borrower's income, contributing
to the unprecedented rise in home prices. However, increasingly stretched borrowers
will find it difficult to make mortgage payments, especially if their financial
situations deteriorate. In addition, despite the fact that many of these loans
are ARMs, lenders only apply income criteria to the initial payment period,
even though there is no way that based on current incomes these borrowers could
afford to make the higher payments once the loans reset.
Mortgage origination & securitization
In the past, mortgages were originated by savings and loans that held them
to maturity. As a result they judiciously safeguarded depositor's money by
only making adequately collateralized loans to creditworthy borrowers. However,
with mortgage originators quickly re-selling their loans, they are not concerned
about the borrower's ability to repay them. Marginal homebuyers getting loans
on terms that would not have been possible using traditional standards caused
home prices to be bid higher than otherwise would have been the case, had fewer
buyers been in the market. Buyers of these packaged products, such as hedge
funds and foreign central banks, assume that their risks are minimized through
diversification and implied federal government guarantees.
Appraisals
Traditionally appraisers were hired by lenders that intended to hold loans
to maturity, and as such were concerned that they be adequately collateralized.
If a loan was too large given the value of its collateral, lenders wanted to
know about it. If appraisals were out of line with purchase prices, lenders
would not fund the loans or would require larger down payments. However, mortgage
originators, only concerned about getting loans funded, could not care less
about the real value of the collateral behind them, and only hire appraisers
that would validate sale prices. Appraisers, aware of this reality, are pressured
to appraise high in order to be assured of future employment. This perverse
relationship has helped fund transactions at prices higher than what otherwise
might have been the case given more honest appraisals.
Equity extractions
The ability of over-stretched homeowners to pull cash out of their homes,
either though refinancing or home equity loans, has turned houses into virtual
ATM's, temporarily suppressing foreclosures. Financially distressed homeowners
are able to extract enough cash to make monthly mortgage payments in circumstances
that otherwise might have resulted in default. Reduced foreclosures have contributed
to escalating home prices and helped keep the mortgage spigots open.
Earnings expectations
Publicly-traded mortgage lenders and home builders have gone to extremes to
meet unrealistic earnings expectations, all in an effort to maintain overvalued
markets for their stocks, enabling unprecedented levels of insider selling.
Lenders have scraped the bot tom of the barrel and abandoned all standards,
in an effort to keep lending and maintain short-term earnings growth. Homebuilders
continue to overbuild to maintain the illusion of future earnings despite growing
evidence that no profitable market will exist for their product.
Homebuyers
The bubble mentality
The speculative mentality that has enveloped homebuyers has so clouded their
judgments that they will pay any price for real estate, which is not only seen
as a "can't lose" investment, but thanks to incredible leverage, the equivalent
of a "ticket to easy street." With houses now regarded as sources of income
rather then expenses, many people see no cost to homeownership. If a typical
homebuyer in Southern California expects a $500,000 condo to appreciate by
$100,000 per year, does he care if the $2,000 monthly mortgage payment consumes
half of his salary? Of course not, as the anticipation of extracting an extra
$100,000 per year in tax-free income means the house is expected to add to,
rather than subtract from monthly income. In fact, with home ownership now
perceived to be more lucrative than employment, is it any wonder that potential
homebuyers will pay outrageous prices, and say or do anything to qualify for
mortgages?
Speculation
The unbridled speculative fever that has turned everyday citizens into river
boat gamblers has created an artificial property shortage, as speculators buy
properties they have no intention of living in, and for which no viable rental
market exists. The concepts of rental income and positive cash flow are now
as passé as earnings and dividend yields were during the tech bubble.
Negative cash flows, easily offset through cash-out refinancing, are regarded
as acceptable trade offs for price appreciation. No one even questions why
a property that is already so over-priced that it produces a negative cash
flow would appreciate in the first place. This Ponzi scheme, greater-fool mentality
typifies bubbles (see my commentary entitled" Still Not Convinced There's a
Real Estate Bubble, Read This!" written April 20th 2005 http://www.europac.net/archives.asp?year=2005&qtr=2.)
Homebuyers are so confident in the certainty of price appreciation, that they
will buy homes using ARMs or interest only mortgages knowing full well that
they can not afford to make the payments when higher interest rates arrive
or principal payments kick in. The strategy is to either cash out equity to
supplement income, or sell the property for a quick profit. Such homebuyers
are clearly real estate speculators in disguise. The fact that they occupy
properties while speculating on short-term price appreciation in no way alters
this reality. As a result, housing speculation is actually far more rampant
than official statistics reflect (see my commentary" Housing Speculation is
More Rampant than You Think" written July 5, 2005 http://www.europac.net/archives.asp?year=2005&qtr=3)
The end result of all this speculation is higher prices. The idea that it
is impossible to over-pay for real estate means no price is too high. The mentality
is to pay whatever it takes, because someone else will always be willing to
pay more. The perception is that the only way to lose in real estate is not
to own any. Is it any wonder that we have experienced the "mother of all manias?"
The Bubble Economy
Contributing to the housing mania is the artificial boost to consumer spending
(80% U.S. GDP,) the bubble itself has produced. This acts as a self-perpetuating, "virtuous" circle
where increased consumer spending drives housing prices higher, which in turn
provides the impetus for still more consumer spending. Through the wealth effect,
growing home equity both increases the willingness of homeowners to spend while
reducing their perceived need to save. The bubble mentality is "why save when
my house is doing it for me." In the past being a homeowner increased the need
to save, as inherent in homeownership are costly repairs. Today homebuyers
not only do not need any savings to buy a house, they no longer need any to
maintain one either. Is it any wonder that our national savings rate is negative,
homeownerships so wide-spread, and real estate prices are so high?
The impetus to spend is not simply the result of a state of mind. The ability
to cash out equity enables homeowners to convert paper appreciation into real
purchasing power. However, since this extra purchasing power was not derived
from legitimate increases in American productivity, the result has been a massive,
unsustainable, and completely unprecedented rise in our nation's trade deficit.
In addition, lower interest rates, and the proliferation of adjustable rate
mortgages, have allowed homeowners to temporarily suppress mortgage payments,
freeing up additional income for discretionary spending. This temporary boost
to consumer spending has been a "shot in the arm" to the economy, increasing
employment, incomes, housing demand and home prices, enabling additional cash-out
refinancing, and thus perpetuating the cycle.
If owning one house is a good investment, then owning two must be an even
better one. Rising real estate prices are self-perpetuating, as increased home
equity gives homeowners the ability to afford more property, putting added
upward pressure on prices and creating additional equity with which to bid
them even higher. Rising prices ratify buyer's expectations of indefinite price
appreciation. They confuse the bubble with their own savvy as real estate investors,
and their short-term success further clouds their judgment, enabling them to
easily dismiss the warnings of skeptics who have missed out on all the profits.
In the past if a homeowner lost his job or fell on hard times he might be forced
to sell his house to make ends meet. Now he simply buys a vacation home, using
the expected appreciation to supplement his income or replace lost wages. Is
it any wonder that ownership of second and even third homes is at record highs?
Conclusion
In the final analysis the temporary factors artificially elevating real estate
prices will subside. Rising interest rates and inflation, and a resumption
of savings as home equity fades, will combine to suppress consumer spending,
leading to recession, job losses, and reduced demand for housing. The supply
of unsold houses will continue to rise as higher interest rates, tighter lending
standards, and higher down payments price more potential buyers out of the
market. Without the expectation of routine cash-out refinancing, homebuyers
will no longer be willing to devote staggering percentages of their incomes
to mortgage payments. In addition, the expectation of lower prices will bring
more sellers to the market, just as buyers are backing away.
Once the trend reverses, falling prices will purge speculative demand from
the market. Once speculators become sellers, supply will overwhelm demand.
As lenders see housing prices fall and inventories rise, increased default
risk will result in tighter lending standards, restricting access to mortgage
credit. As more mortgages go into default, the secondary market for mortgage
backed securities will dry up as well. This will act as a self-perpetuating,
vicious cycle, as tighter lending standards reduce housing demand, leading
to lower home prices, more defaults, fewer qualified buyers, lower prices,
tighter standards, ad infinitum. In addition, the collapse of consumer spending
associated with higher mortgage payments and vanishing home equity, will plunge
the economy into a severe recession, further exacerbating the collapse in real
estate prices, worsening the recession, and continuing the vicious cycle.
The housing mania, like all manias that have preceded it, is finally coming
to a long overdue end. Time tested principles of prudent mortgage lending will
inevitability return, and houses will once again be regarded merely as places
to live. However, the country will be a lot poorer as a result of the unprecedented
dissipation of wealth and accumulation of consumer and mortgage debt which
occurred during the bubble years. Before real estate prices can return to normal
levels, they will first have to get dirt cheep. It has been a wild party, but
in the end all that will remain is a giant hang-over.
In the mean time, ride out the housing collapse in the safety of foreign currency
denominate assets. Download my free research report "The Collapsing Dollar:
The Powerful Case for Investing in Foreign Equities" available at www.researchreport1.com.
You will likely be amazed at just home much house your foreign assets will
enable you to buy.
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