Real
Estate News
What
Housing Bubble?
By NEIL
BARSKY
July 28, 2005
If you want to be scared out
of your wits these days, you basically have two choices: go watch
Steven Spielberg's latest, or listen to the hysterical warnings
of economists and journalists about the imminent popping of our
so-called housing bubble. Robert Shiller, the ubiquitous Yale economist,
says home prices could fall 50% from their peak. Taking things
a step further, The Economist recently went so far as to call the
global housing boom "the biggest bubble in history."
In a free country, it is fair
game for the media and economists to scare homeowners with words
of gloom and doom, however knee-jerk, consensual and misguided
they may be. But housing is a serious business; for most of us,
it is our most valuable asset. For generations of immigrants, home
ownership has represented the realization of the American dream.
The reality is this: There is
no housing bubble in this country. Our strong housing market is
a function of myriad factors with real economic underpinnings:
low interest rates, local job growth, the emotional attachment
one has for one's home, one's view of one's future earning- power,
and parental contributions, all have done their part to contribute
to rising home prices. Over the past quarter-century, there has
been an explosion of second-home purchases, a continued influx
of immigrants, and a significant reduction in existing housing
inventory through tear-downs. Not all of these trends are accurately
reflected in the unending stream of data published daily. Home
prices on average have risen at a 6% annual pace since 1999, and
13% over the past year.
What we do have is a serious
housing shortage and housing affordability crisis. Despite robust
construction, unsold inventory stands at four months, well below
its 25-year average. Private builders complain they can't get land
permitted to meet demand. Low-income housing advocates complain
housing prices are out of reach for many Americans, and that government
subsidies have been slashed.
I am not an economist, though
if you keep reading, you'll find I can use selective data points
to my advantage with the best of them. I was a real estate reporter
for this newspaper through several real estate crises, as well
as a Wall Street REIT analyst; I am now a money manager. I currently
own stocks in several homebuilders; so I am putting my money where
my mouth is.
Of course, over the past 25
years we have seen numerous real estate busts. However, steep price
declines have typically been driven by local economic factors --
oil woes lead to weakness in Texas in the '80s; aerospace and defense
layoffs soften up prices in LA in the '90s; a contraction on Wall
Street hurts New York co-op prices.
What we have never seen in this
country is a collapse of home prices without also seeing local
economic weakness or significant capacity growth. Absent those
factors, housing markets just don't collapse under their own weight.
Herewith are some of the myths put forth by the housing bubble
Chicken Littles.
• Myth
#1. There is too much capacity: According to Census data,
over the past 10 years, housing permits have averaged about 1.63
million units per year -- including multifamily units. Household
formation has averaged 1.49 million families per year. So far, so
good. But here is where the data gets murky. Roughly 6% of the new
home sales were for second homes (I have seen estimates that the
number is actually twice as high), according to UBS. And while there
are no precise numbers on this, approximately 360,000 units every
year were torn down either because they were nonfunctional, or because
they were "tear-downs." When
the latter two numbers are taken into account, the real number of new
homes is closer to 1.2 million, or 19% fewer than the average number
of new households formed each year.
• Myth #2. Risky mortgage products are fueling house appreciation:
Sages from Warren Buffett to Alan Greenspan have warned of the increased
risk from the use of new mortgage products, particularly adjustable-rate
mortgages and interest-only mortgages. The theory here is that
buyers are extending themselves to make payments, and when their
mortgages reset they will be in trouble. Put aside the fact that
only a year ago Mr. Greenspan was advocating the use of ARMs ("American consumers might benefit if lenders provided greater mortgage product
alternatives to the traditional fixed-rate mortgage," he told the Credit Union
National Association last year), these concerns are wildly overstated. As virtually
every mortgagee in the country knows, most ARMs are fixed rate for the first
two to seven years. Virtually all have 2% interest-rate caps. The average American
owns his home for seven years. Why pay several hundred basis points to lock in
rates he is highly unlikely to take advantage of? Moreover, very little equity
has been paid off by a homeowner in the first seven years of a 30-year loan,
so consumers have been effectively overspending on interest rates for generations.
As Mr. Greenspan said in his 2004 speech, "the traditional fixed-rate mortgage
may be an expensive method of financing a home."
• Myth #3. Speculators are Driving Home Prices:
The media today is chock-full of stories of day-trading dot-com
refugees who have found their calling buying homes and condos "on spec," with the hope of flipping the
property for a higher price. Earlier this month, one Wall Street analyst published
an article with the catchy headline: "Investors Gone Wild: An Analysis of Real
Estate Speculation." Scary stuff. Here, again, some common-sense thinking is
in order. In Manhattan, where I live, friends buy apartments kicking and screaming,
convinced they top-ticked the housing market. Is Manhattan special? Are speculators
flipping Palm Beach mansions? Bay Area three-bedroom homes? Newton, Mass.,
Tudor homes? I don't think so. Yet these markets are experiencing the same
price appreciation as Las Vegas, Phoenix and Florida, where real estate investors
are supposedly driving prices higher.
Anyone waiting for prices to
collapse before buying a home is likely to be in for a disappointment.
According to the Homeownership Alliance, new household formation,
replacement demand and second-home demand will require about two
million homes per year to be built over the next decade. This year,
the number is likely to be around two million, the highest number
since the 1970s -- even as the number of households has grown by
over 50% since 1975. Therefore, there is a large cumulative deficit
in housing that will take years to correct even if annual housing
starts continue at these record levels.
To the cynical, it is seductive
to claim that every piece of good news is a bit fraudulent. And
real estate has certainly been subject to boom and bust cycles.
But bubbles happen when prices become unhinged from intrinsic value.
Homes are not stocks; their "intrinsic value" can only be in the
eye of the beholder. A house has utility. Rational people might
be willing to pay more for a water view, or for living close to
work, or for a larger loo. Such voluntary economic decisions are
neither irrational nor exuberant.
It's time to stop being alarmist
about home prices. To the extent policy makers want to modulate
home-price appreciation, they would do well to relax zoning laws,
or stimulate development of low-income housing through tax subsidies.
Since those things are not likely to happen overnight, housing
prices are likely to cool off slowly, if at all.
Mr. Barsky is managing
partner of Alson Capital Partners, LLC. |