Better late than never, huh? The so-called Fed model is often used to gauge
the under-over-valuation of corporate equities by comparing the earnings yield
on, say, the S&P 500 with the yield on the Treasury 10-year security. The
same kind of analysis can be applied to owner-occupied housing by dividing
the "earnings" or services produced by owner-occupied housing by the market
value of that housing. The services produced by housing are estimated by the
Bureau of Economic Analysis in its National Income and Product Table 2.45U,
line item "Personal Consumption Expenditures: Owner-Occupied Nonfarm Dwellings:
Space Rent." The market value of owner-occupied housing is estimate by the
Federal Reserve in its Flow-of-Funds Table B.100, line item "Balance Sheet
of the Household and Nonprofit Organizations: Assets: Households: Total Owner-occupied
Real Estate." Both the nominal "yield" on owner-occupied housing and the nominal
yield on Treasury 10-year securities are shown in Chart 1.
Chart 1

Chart 2 shows the difference in percentage points between the yield
on owner-occupied housing and the yield on a Treasury 10-year security. After
being slightly negative (3 basis points) in 2006:Q2, the yield on housing was
46 basis points over 10-year Treasuries in 2007:Q1. But that pales in comparison
to the annual average positive yield differentials of 115 basis points, 127
basis points, 154 basis points, and 103 basis points in 2001, 2002, 2003 and
2004, respectively. Although hardly news, but the Fed model is just more confirmation
that bloom and boom is off the housing rose.
Chart 2

Households: Up To Their Eyebrows in Debt, Down Top Their Ankles
in Liquidity
In 2007:Q1, total household debt represented 18.584% of the market value of
total household assets - just off the record high of 18.684% set in 2006:Q3
(see Chart 3).
Chart 3

Households' single-largest asset, their houses, is carrying record debt relative
to its market value (see Chart 4). I can't confirm it, but conventional wisdom
has it that about one-third of all owner-occupied housing has no debt associated
with it. If that's case, then with record leverage in housing today, the two-thirds
of houses with debt associated with them must have an incredibly high debt-to-value
ratio.
Chart 4

With total household leverage just off a record high, household liquidity,
defined as total household deposits as a percent of total household debt, is
just off a record low (see Chart 5). I know, I know. Households don't need
to be liquid today inasmuch as they can more easily borrow when those rainy
days come than they could in yesteryear. My response to that is that households
have already used their rainy-day borrowing during the sunny days (again see
Chart 3).
Chart 5
