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Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Home Price Forecast

The Case-Shiller home price index fell again for the month of May. Home prices nationwide are down about 16% in the past 12 months. For most Americans, their home is their biggest investment. For them, a 16% decline in 12 months is brutal. An estimated 3 million homes will be foreclosed in 2008. That is flooding a real estate resale market that is now running at about 4.5 million homes per year. As a result, almost 2 out of 3 homes sold in the next 12 months will be foreclosures.

When foreclosures are a small fraction of the total real estate market, they don't affect the average home price. In a normal market Realtors won't even show a prospective homebuyer foreclosed homes. They either want to a) fix them up and flip them themselves for a quick profit or b) show the buyer something more expensive in order to earn a bigger commission. But the number of foreclosed homes has long passed the critical mass necessary to impact the average home price. One indication of this is the Realtors that are organizing bus tours of foreclosed homes.

At this time, every new foreclosure on the market lowers the average sales price. Every time a bank initiates a foreclosure, they are lowering the market price on the homes they are already trying to sell. It would make sense for the banks to tell borrowers that have missed a couple of payments, "Just pay us something. If you make at least half of your required payment we'll forestall initiating the foreclosure proceedings." Then they could focus on the serious deadbeats while they try to trim their inventory of homes that they already own. The result would be a higher average home price and reduced losses.

Unfortunately, the system is set up so that the company servicing the mortgage is not the same as the one that gets the partial payout when the home is foreclosed. The servicer is losing money with each missed payment, so the servicer has an incentive to foreclose as quickly as possible. But the servicer is not responsible for the value of the property when it is sold. To the servicer, what matters is cash flow, not loss mitigation. So as property values drop, homeowners have less incentive to make their monthly payments and foreclosure filings accelerate. The whole thing creates a negative feedback loop that floods the market with empty homes and reduces the value for all homeowners.

The drop in home prices has been long enough and hard enough that pessimism in the real estate and homebuilding industry is at an all time high. The prevailing wisdom is that this will continue for a long time to come. Yet the latest home price data offers a reason for hope. While home prices continue to drop, the veocity of the drop seemed to hit its peak in the first quarter of 2008. The rate at which home prices are decreasing slowed in April and May.

Some of this can be explained by seasonal patterns. Home prices tend to rise faster in April through August than during the rest of the year. But that seasonality explains only a small part of the flattening prices. It's dangerous to make long term projections based on just a few months of data flattening the curve, but it's now beginning to appear that home prices in general will continue to drop for the next 12 months or so, but are starting to stabilize.

Since California and Florida are two states of high interest, I've prepared two graphs that show the direction of home prices indicated by the current data. The graphs show forecast results up through August 2009.




























If you are interested in other cities, please reply to this post and let me know where your real estate interest is.

The data right now is pointing to a return to prices that represent a 4% to 5% annual return since 2000. Four percent is a sustainable level of return. The curves shown are simply a reversion to the mean. The data right now is not pointing to an overcorrection which would give us a 10-year annual return significantly less than 4%. If the economy were to go into a significant recession, an overcorrection would be not only possible, but likely.

Qout

4 comments:

Kirk Lindstrom said...

Very good article.

I would be interested in seeing the charts and data for some counties in California:

Top choices:
San Mateo
Santa Clara

Others of interest:
El Dorado County
Napa

Thanks

Steve Thompson said...

Qout, in talking to a couple local builders things are holding up much better in Sioux Falls, SD. Granted things are not hopping like they were a few years ago but they describe things as stable. One actually was doing a custom home for a friend and didn’t get anything upfront and the buyer backed out. He went ahead and finished it as a spec house and it sold at his asking price two weeks after he got it finished last May. He said it was originally scheduled to be completed the end of April so he didn’t rush to get it done.

From what I hear a few of the markets outside CA, FL, NV, & MI are doing OK and a few are showing some strength.

I never knew the apparent conflict between servicers & the bank but it makes sense they way you explained it. Maybe long term some good will come from this episode. Just maybe we’ll see tighter lending standards for awhile and consumers will avoid adjustable mortgages. Especially when rates were pretty decent if you actually qualified for a rational mortgage.

I think a bottom is in sight and the leadership will begin with the smaller markets that didn’t reach bubble prices and rapid YoY increases in values. Once the larger markets that had the heaviest corrections bottom I think we will have a new foundation for Real Estate prices to advance Nationally.

I would like to see a graph of the Sioux Falls market if available. For my own purposes and to figure my home equity I have neither increased nor decreased my estimate of my homes selling price since the end of 2006. I wonder how far off I’ve been.

Honeybee said...

I just dropped by to say hi to my old friend, Qout.

Hope all is well with you and your lovely family.

Qout said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
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