Scotiabank
has released its Global Real Estate Trends research publication for December
2011 and it contains some very interesting data and observations.
The
author, Adrienne Warren, opens by noting that four factors are working against
the global housing market; the slow pace of the economic recovery, weak
consumer confidence, high unemployment and the sovereign debt crisis. Of
the real estate markets in the ten developed economies that Scotia bank tracked
in the third quarter of 2011, average real home prices were below last year's
levels in seven. The best performing market was Canada and the worst was
Ireland with the United States coming in at seventh place and the United Kingdom
coming in at sixth place. Let's take a more detailed look at several of
the markets in the report.
1.) Ireland: Here is a graph showing
Ireland's real house price index since 1992:
Ireland,
the worst performer among the ten nations, saw its year-over-year housing
market down by 14.7 percent in real terms, adding up to a cumulative drop of 44
percent from its highs in early 2007. This drop has pretty much negated
the real estate price increases Ireland has seen over the past decade.
Between 1992 and 2007, house prices in Ireland rose by nearly 330
percent, largely as a result of massive growth in the country's economy (recall
the long-extinct Celtic Tiger?). This was both the biggest and longest
housing boom. With a drop of 44 percent, Ireland has now seen the largest
downward price readjustment, however, its house prices still retain the largest
cumulative price growth among the sample nations suggesting that the correction
may not yet be over. From the graph it is also apparent that the downward
slope is still quite steep, suggesting that prices have not levelled.
2.) United
Kingdom: Here
is a graph showing the United Kingdom's real house price index since 1995:
House
prices in the U.K. are declining again after a short-term recovery in 2010 with
real home prices declining by 6.7 percent on a year-over-year basis. Over
the period from 1995 to 2007, real house prices in the U.K. rose by 174 percent
and fell 15 percent from the 2007 peak to the third quarter of 2011.
4.) United
States: Here
is a graph showing the United States' real house price index since 1996:
Between
1995 and 2005, the United States saw real price growth of 50 percent in its
housing market. A sharp reversal in 2006 has resulted in cumulative
downward price readjustment of 31 percent with a year-over-year drop of 7.5
percent in the third quarter of 2011. Unfortunately, a stagnant job
market, oversupply of foreclosures and unsold homes and tight credit conditions
have led to a very moribund housing market. Here is a graph showing the slump in the leading U.S. housing indicators:
With
prices, home sales and housing starts moving sideways during 2011, one would
think that demand for housing would be rising. Unfortunately as I noted
above, that is not the case despite the fact that home prices are now among the
most affordable as valuations have fallen below long-term trends. Weak
income growth and weak employment gains are dragging the market sideways, resulting
in consumers that are reluctant to purchase real estate. As well, an
oversupply of housing has kept new construction growth at a minimum with the
number of vacant homes alone standing about 600,000 above its long-term trend.
One thing working in the favour of future housing price increases is the
drop in American household debt levels as shown here:
Household
credit has now fallen from its peak of 164 percent of household disposable
income to 146 percent in the third quarter of 2011. While still high,
this readjustment is a marked improvement and if the trend continues, it could
provide a boost to the housing market as consumers feel that their financial
situation is more stable.
5.) Canada: Here is a graph showing
Canada's real house price index since 1998:
In
the period between 1998 and the present, Canada has not seen a downward price
readjustment, in fact, among the nations in the study, Sweden, Switzerland and
Canada are the only nations that have seen steady price appreciation with
prices at or near record highs. Over that timeframe, Canadian real estate
prices have risen by an inflation-corrected 85 percent, relatively small when
compared to some of the European nations in the study. On a year-over-year
basis, prices rose by 4.8 percent in the third quarter of 2011 with some leveling
off of prices in November due to economic uncertainty. Canada’s housing
boom is now in its 13th year, just behind Ireland and Sweden's 15 year boom.
Here
is a graph showing how both the number of sales and how real estate prices in
Canada have risen since 1990:
Let's
just say that its been a good decade to be a realtor!
A
great deal of this boom in Canada's real estate can be attributed to ever lower
mortgage interest rates as shown on this graph:
While I realize that some of the issues facing the real
estate markets in other nations are specific to the economies of those nations and that they are
unlikely to impact Canada' real estate market, one should never say never.
With Canadians facing record high household debt levels, the day of
reckoning could be just around the corner if interest rates rise even modestly
and consumer debt becomes less serviceable. No one thought that the
United States' real estate market would crash in 2006 - 2007, did they?
Apparently, they were very, very wrong.
I can only write about the UK.
ReplyDeleteApart from the economic indicators in the article, population growth mainly from immigration into the UK, say 48 Million in the 1950's to approximately 60 Million currently has caused property prices to mushroom.
Supply vs Demand
In some major US real estate markets ( So. Cal, Arizona, Nevada, Florida) home values have dropped by 50% or more. Even at these historic low prices (relative to incomes), home sales are pitifully weak.
ReplyDeleteThe decrease in US household debt is largely due to huge numbers of people defaulting on their underwater mortgages. Funny how walking away from a loan of a couple hundred thousand dollars can "improve" your debt to income ratios !
In Canada, a home owner cannot simply walk away from a mortgage. The lenders can seek payment from any other assets.While I agree the increasing market in Canada is a bit long in the tooth, the homes usually have a substantial amount of equity and while rates will eventually go up the date of the increase keeps getting pushed out further.
ReplyDeleteOverall, the housing market seems to be about supply-demand driven by jobs and location.
ReplyDeleteIn many areas of the US (AZ, FL, NV, parts of CA), there was huge speculative overbuilding while, in the meantime, jobs were being gradually exported overseas (China). Lack of the job creation eliminated in-migration/immigration pressure on the housing market plus who was going to buy so many new houses/condos in areas without stable and well-paid new jobs?
On the other hand, the housing prices in NY city, DC (inside of the beltway), Boston have stayed relatively unchanged due to existence of well-paying jobs and stable/increasing population.
Jobs in finance-related, government (& its contractors), universities and healthcare have NOT been shipped out, so the housing oversupply has not been felt so much.