One graph from The Urban Institute's Housing
Finance Policy Center gives us a good clue about why the improvements in the
American housing market seem to be stalling:
As you can see, the
average FICO score/creditworthiness measure of purchase-only mortgagees of all
types (i.e. those that are less creditworthy (10th percentile) as well as those
that are considered most creditworthy (90th percentile)) has risen steadily since
2001. In May 2014, the least
creditworthy borrowers needed to have a FICO score of at least 658, up from the
low 600s prior to the Great Recession. Even the most creditworthy
borrowers have seen their credit requirements rise from around 790 prior to the
Great Recession to 801 in mid-2014. Average (mean) FICO scores for
borrowers has risen from the low 700s prior to the Great Recession to 737 in
mid-2014.
These tighter credit
restrictions have discouraged potential home buyers and led to a situation
where cash bids have an advantage. This means that cash buyers, mainly investors, who are looking to purchase housing units to rent to families that cannot
access mortgage funding are the ones benefitting from the current mortgage
situation. Here is a graph from FRED showing the number
of houses that were sold for cash:
In the third quarter of
2005, 16,000 homes were sold to cash buyers. This dropped rather
precipitously to a Great Recession low of 4,000 units but has risen as high as
10,000 units in the second quarter of 2013. While this is a strong
improvement, it is still below the pre-Great Recession long-term average of
11,000 units.
In general, in the past,
as the economy recovered from a recession, the amount of mortgage debt in the
system expanded. Such is not the case since the Great Recession as we can
see on this graph from FRED that shows outstanding
mortgage debt back to 1949:
You can see that the
post-Great Recession situation of shrinking mortgage debt is very unique
Let's zoom in on the data
from 2006 to the present:
In the last quarter of
2007 (the official beginning of the Great Recession) there was $14.622 trillion
worth of outstanding mortgage debt. By the second quarter of 2008,
mortgage debt had risen to a peak of $14.808 trillion. In the first
quarter of 2013, mortgage debt had fallen to its post-Great Recession low of
$13.219 trillion, a drop of $1.403 trillion or 9.5 percent. At the end of
the first quarter of 2014, mortgage debt had increased very modestly from its
post-Great Recession low, hitting $13.268 trillion, an increase of only 0.4 percent.
It is also interesting to
look at how the type of mortgages being issued has changed since prior to the
Great Recession as shown on this graph:
During the peak of the
housing market in 2005/2006, up to 29 percent of all new mortgages (including
refinances) were ARMs (adjustable-rate mortgages) as shown in light blue.
This fell to a historic low of 1 percent in 2009 and has since risen to 7
percent. Currently, 70 percent of all mortgages are 30 year fixed-rate mortgages.
The issuers of mortgages
has also changed markedly since the Great Recession as shown on this graph:
In the first seven months
of 2014, non-agency issuance has totalled only $6.8 billion, down from $21.9
billion the year before. This is a tiny fraction of the nearly $1.2
trillion worth of non-agency mortgages that were issued in 2005 as shown on
this graph:
It is interesting to note
that housing affordability is relatively high by long-term historical standards
as shown on this graph where a value of 100 means
that a family with a median income has enough income to qualify for a mortgage
on a median-priced home and a value of 153.4 (the current value) means that a
family has 153 percent of the income necessary to qualify for a mortgage loan
that covers 80 percent of a median-priced home:
The current housing
market is unique; prices have fallen to a point where housing is more
affordable by a median family yet tighter borrowing behaviours by lenders (also
known as the irrational restriction of credit) in response to the losses that they incurred during their overly loose lending standards of the mid-2000s has
pushed home ownership rates down to levels not seen since the mid-1990s. As
well, Helicopter Ben Bernanke's pumping up of the money supply to stimulate lending has not had the
desired impact on the American housing market that the Federal Reserve
expected, yet another failure in the Fed's monetary policy program.
Unless all of the players in the housing market work together, it is likely that improvements in America's housing market since the end of the Great Recession will stall and that we'll see very modest increases in housing prices until lenders decide to lend.
The answer to this set of fact is simple( I think). Why should banks lend money via mortgages to people who may or may not default due to the crappy economy. I mean their jobs can be down sized at any minute. Where the big money is (due to the repeal of glass steagall) the stock market. As long as the FED is pumping in money stocks pretty much can’t go down so why take a chance with the money when market seems to only be able to go up.
ReplyDeleteThanks for another great Article.
ReplyDeleteWhen it comes to real estate low interest rates at some point becomes a double edge sword, that effects both the value by making it easier to purchase thus driving up prices, and at the same time allowing more building to take place and increasing the supply. Often we reach or exceed demand, this eventually has a dampening effect on rents and people stop buying it as an "investment".
Prices must rise and real estate appreciate more then the natural depreciation from the wear and tear from age or the main driver for owning it vanishes. Oversupply is the bane of real estate and crushes the value of this hard and expensive to maintain commodity. Currently we are in uncharted waters, more on this subject in the article below.
http://brucewilds.blogspot.com/2013/12/super-low-interest-rates-disservi...