FRED, that wonderful
source of all things economic, has a lot of interesting data that is there for
the taking. As you'll see in this posting, there is one very little
discussed aspect of America's housing market that has shown almost no improvement
since the end of the Great Recession.
Here is a graph showing the year-round vacant
housing units for the United States:
In the first quarter of
2014, there were 13,596,000 housing units in America that were vacant
year-round. This includes housing units that are for sale, for rent or
those that have been sold but not yet occupied but does not include housing
units that are temporarily occupied by persons whose usual residence is
elsewhere. It also includes vacant mobile homes. These year-round
units are those which are, obviously, intended for year-round use. At its peak in the
second quarter of 2010, there were 14,580,000 year-round vacant housing units,
up from 13,428,000 in the fourth quarter of 2007 just as the Great Recession
began. We can see that while the current number of year-round vacant
housing units is down by 6.7 percent from the post-Great Recession peak, it is
actually higher than it was at the beginning of the last recession.
Here is a graph showing
the percentage of total housing units in the United States that are vacant
year-round:
In the first quarter of
2014, 10.2 percent of all housing units in America were year-round vacant, down
from 11.0 percent in the second quarter of 2010 but only slightly lower than
the pre-Great Recession level of 10.35 percent.
Here is a graph showing year-round vacant
housing units by Census Regions since 2000:
Here is a graph showing
the number of vacant housing units that are being held off the market and
vacant for other reasons:
Here is how the Census
Bureau defines the concept of "vacant for other reasons":
"Included in this category are year-round units which were
vacant for reasons other than for occasional use, and units Occupied by persons
with usual residence elsewhere. For example, held for settlement of an estate,
held for personal reasons, or held for repairs."
In the second quarter of
2014, a total of 3,975,000 housing units were vacant for the aforementioned
reasons. It is interesting to note that this number has steadily climbed
from 3,204,000 just prior to the Great Recession, an increase of 24 percent.
A study by the Census Bureau in 2012 showed that
there were several reasons why there were so many "other vacant"
housing units as shown on this graphic:
Note that by the fourth
quarter of 2012, 14.9 percent of homes that were vacant for other reasons
needed repairs and 12.2 percent were undergoing foreclosure proceedings.
According to Census
Bureau data, compared to year-round vacant units, other vacant units were more
likely to be units with three bedrooms or more, single family homes, older
units built before 1969 and units that had been vacant for more than a year.
Here is an example of how bad the vacancy
issue can be in a given urban area:
Note that in Las Vegas,
one of the hardest hit real estate markets in the United States, 17.9 percent
of condominiums and 9.2 percent of townhouses were vacant in the third quarter
of 2013. Admittedly, this is an improvement over the first quarter of
2013 when the vacancy rates were 19.4 percent and 10.9 percent respectively,
however, the real estate situation in Las Vegas can hardly be termed healthy.
The minds behind the
Federal Reserve have thought long and hard about this issue. Governor
Elizabeth Duke addressed the problem back in October 2012 when she noted that the
problem of vacant housing units was not evenly distributed across the United
States. In 2012, one-tenth of all census tracts account for nearly 40
percent of the entire vacant housing stock. She noted that homes that are
foreclosed but not vacant lower property values by up to 3.9 percent, however,
homes that are foreclosed and vacant can lower neighbouring housing values by
nearly 10 percent. As well, in general, the longer that a home is vacant,
the greater the need for repairs. While she offered no meaningful
solutions other than attempting to attract private capital to needy areas and
various forms of government assistance, she did state that:
"Solving the
problems of long-term vacancies will require the best efforts of public,
private, and non-profit leaders locally and across the country. I can assure
you the Federal Reserve System will continue to support recovery through the
use of all its policy tools and research capacity."
That's a great
reassurance to those Americans living in neighbourhoods pock-marked with vacant
homes, isn't it? Six years into this economic mess and the Fed still hasn't figured it out!
I live in the Hudson Valley region of New York and Across the street are two vacant homes. One purchased by someone who i think wanted to flip it but hasn't gotten around to fixing the problems of the house(2 years so far) The other had renters in it but they left and its been vacant for 4 years now. No clue whats going on with that one. Note I dont live in a run down part of town or anything. Just more or less average for the area.
ReplyDeleteI have owned an apartment complex in the Midwest for many years and we are currently experiencing the largest number of vacancies we have ever had. Many houses in the area are empty or under leased. In 2005 and 2006 prior to the housing collapse many people were looking at second homes, for investments or as a vacation getaway.
ReplyDeleteToday many of those people have shed the extra homes and some have doubled up with family or friends reducing the need for housing. We are pushing on a string and calling it demand when someone who can barely pay the rent is encouraged by the government to buy a house they can neither afford or maintain. We have a shortage of "qualified" buyers and renters. The idea of strong demand is a myth. More on this subject in the article below.
http://brucewilds.blogspot.com/2013/12/super-low-interest-rates-disservive-to.html
As a footnote, in Texas where things are said to be booming my mother had her house on the market for a long time and it sold for far less than expected.