Posted on 06/05/2010 3:06:45 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
The market was ecstatic on Wednesday in anticipation of Fridays big jobs report. But while the market rallied 2.5%+ there was a potentially far more important story than the census driven jobs report: the real estate data. While the data came in better than expected, primarily due to the end of the home buyers tax credit, there was an underlying red flag. As the end of Spring buying season coincided with the tax credit the buyers have literally become non-existent in the housing market. This was clear in the most recent mortgage applications data also released on Wednesday. Diana Olick at CNBC has done a fantastic job covering the housing market. She had the details yesterday:
Mortgage applications to purchase a home began to sink. Now, four weeks later, mortgage purchase applications are down nearly 40 percent from a month ago to their lowest level since April of 1997. Yes, you can argue that a larger-than normal share of buyers today are all cash, but those are largely investors.
That means real organic buyers are exiting in droves.
And she isnt the only one noting the red flag. In Thursdays missive David Rosenberg also pointed to the plummeting mortgage applications:
The good news at least is that U.S. mortgage applications for refinancing purposes rose 2.4% during the May 28th week the fourth increase in a row and while hardly a major boom that should cause any forecast shift and it does add a bit of coinage in household pocketbooks. But the big problem is with housing demand given that the homebuyer tax credits are behind us mortgage applications for new purchases fell 4.1% and down for four weeks running. This is where the rubber meets the road for new home sales a fresh 13-year low.
The year-on-year trend in purchases is -34% and that is compound off a late-May 2009 trend of -20%. How bad is that? And this is with mortgage rates at 4.83%? No doubt there are scars left over from the misery of being a homebuyer following the detonation of the last bubble and attitudes towards debt and housing have been altered semi-permanently.
(CHART AT LINK)
Is the housing market already double dipping? That certainly appears to be the case and exactly on cue as the government steps aside. While the mortgage applications are no guarantee of a renewed trend the warning flags are popping up all over the place. In addition to the negative seasonal trends ahead of us, we are also seeing lumber prices off 33% in the last month, continuing high historical inventories, a slew of mortgage resets in the coming years, and the biggie the end of government intervention.
Earlier this year I detailed my outlook on housing and why I believe the real estate market is on the precipice of a double dip. I said we were likely in for further declines of 7-15% starting with the end of government stimulus:
House prices decline 7%-15%. This is the most probable outcome in my opinion. In this scenario the private sector remains weak, labor markets rebound slowly, wage growth remains tepid, the economy grows below trend, government stimulus stops bolstering markets in 2011/2012, the economy perhaps double dips or re-recessions in 2012, and house prices ultimately succumb to the laws of supply and demand and decline another 15% or so.
Investors are keenly focused on the potential time bomb in Europe, but housing is the domino that set the whole collapse in motion in 2007. The housing market was largely stabilized by government intervention. The consumer is likely to move in tandem with their largest asset. If we experience the 7-15% price decline over the coming 24 months that I expect we should see a retrenchment in consumer balance sheets and further tightening of the credit markets.
I have maintained that the housing stimulus was an enormous waste of money and nothing more than price fixing that would temporarily stabilize the markets. The government is about to find out why bailing out the losers ultimately works to the detriment of markets. Lets just hope the downturn isnt more severe than I suspect. And lets all pray it doesnt coincide with increasing contagion across Europe
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Look at the housing starts chart and remember that the Dems took Congress in 2006.
LOL. A government funded uptick in sales and we "need to keep our eyes open"!
As a renter who will be in the market for a home purchase in a year or two ... this doesn’t bother me :-D.
Yes, when you realize the banks are using the TARP money to offset the losses they took in derivatives, etc. They need to show that the books look good. Taking on new debt skews the numbers.
Since Real Estate offices spend the majority of their advertising dollars with newspapers, the press is usually very favorable and inaccurate.
Yes, but if they want to “show” the economy is “improving”, wouldn’t they want to snap up debt like this - they are essentially guaranteed to get repaid.
No.
In actuality we will be better off when the market corrects itself - restoring affordable housing to young couples without government handouts.
I have found this website to be a very useful source of information on the economy, gold, and silver.
http://goldismoney.info/forums/
The GOP has no clue what to do either. While people are hoping for a GOP victory, their current set of ‘solutions’ won’t do much other than shift the deck chairs to the other side of the ship from where the donkeys put them.
You would think a party out of power would have all kinds of solutions to propose. What the heck else do they have to do?
Thank you! You read my mind!
They are hoarding cash because they know the real downturn hasn't arrived yet.
I think the problem is that many junior banksters are stupid and poorly educated and just don't know much about what they're doing.
One valid reason that a bank might turn down a loan app would be that they’ve gotten some smarts and are considering the possibility that a house “worth” 200k today might appraise at 150k three years from now.
They were trying to refinance it for what they owed, 90K.
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