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It has been two years since the bursting of the housing bubble began, but
we can still hear a plethora of lunacy spewed from market pundits regarding
the future of this key part of the economy. After hearing that home prices
would never decline, we now hear that real estate is a very small part of our
economy. Last week, Mike Norman, of the Economic Contrarian Update, was part
of a panel debating the future of the economy and housing and he said that
inventory of unsold homes would soon fall dramatically.
His reasoning was that new home construction rates had fallen to an annual
level of 1mm units and that there were 3 million more people in the country
each year, leading viewers to believe that there is an insufficient supply
of new homes to satisfy the population growth. As I
discuss in this week's podcast, this sounds reasonable on the surface --
unless you think about it for more than two seconds. Since each residence does
not house one person, the math does not work in favor of Mr. Norman's contention.
According to the U.S. Census bureau, there are 2.6 people per domicile. Therefore,
new home construction rates need to be about 1.15 million units annually in
order to satisfy the intrinsic demand. New home construction levels are running
at 1.006 unit annual level, while new home sales are running at an annual level
of 604,000, which looks positive for housing on the surface. The fact is, however,
that conditions remain so weak that home builders are still adding to
inventories, which now stand at over a two-decade high supply of 9.6 months.
As demand became unnaturally strong during the housing bull, it will likely
become unusually weak in order to correct those recent excesses.
We know that sales are down and prices are falling, the weakness in housing
is not news. What is interesting to hear now from the perennial bulls, who
can no longer deny the problems associated with housing, is that housing is
only a small part of G.D.P. We used to hear the mantra "as housing goes so
goes the economy." Now we hear from Brian Westbury and others that real estate
is exactly 4.5% of G.D.P. Where do they get that figure?
When you consider in aggregate the employment, durable goods, home equity
extraction and wealth effect of rising real estate values, that 4.5% number
jumps dramatically-some have estimated 3 times that level-and that is why the
weakness in housing has caused massive disruptions in the economy and financial
markets.
Just looking at equity extractions alone which we saw during the height of
the bubble, consumers' took out over $800 billion from the perceived increased
value of their homes. In a 13 trillion dollar economy that's 6.1% of G.D.P.!
According to data compiled by none other than Allan Greenspan and Fed economist
Jim Kennedy, mortgage equity withdrawal grew to 1% of the economy by the end
of 2005! And if you think home equity withdrawal has disappeared due to tighter
lending standards and falling values read this: as of the third quarter of
2007, such equity extractions were still running at an annual rate of $532
billion or 4% of G.D.P.! This rate will surely decline over time but the point
is that housing is still a more significant part of the economy than the "official" number
suggests.
The uncontained problems associated with the credit bubble, which happen to
be manifested most acutely in the real estate market, will take several more
quarters to work out. However, what cannot be ignored or underestimated is
the Fed and Bush administration's complete abdication of responsibility to
keep inflation in check, be it by massive infusions of fiat currency into the
banking system or a deficit-exploding stimulus package. In their attempt to
repeal the business cycle, they may be able to truncate the duration
of the housing correction and economic slowdown.
However, this strategy has an undeniable consequence: inflation. As far as
I'm concerned the Fed has made it clear they will take rates to zero if they
must in order to re-inflate asset prices and thus, it has tacitly stated where
you should be investing. My advice is: don't fight the Fed! Shorting the stock
market will be a dangerous exercise and commodity-related investments should
remain a focus for new money.
**NOTE: I manage an inflation-targeted
portfolio on behalf of clients... use the link here to learn more.
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