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What Could Save the Housing Market

By Rich Toscano



Wednesday, May 16, 2007 | The speculative housing bubble that launched San Diego home prices so high is now in the process of deflating. Prices have been on the decline for over a year, but they remain well above the levels that would be justified by the economic fundamentals now that the bubble-era forces of rampant buyer optimism and unsustainably lax lending are disappearing before our eyes.

"We have a long way to go before home prices once again meet up with their fundamentals, and there's no way of knowing exactly what path will be followed to that destination."
Using the analytical framework described above, and considering the precedents set by past boom/bust cycles in the San Diego housing market, it sure seems that the most likely outcome is for San Diego home prices to continue declining for some time to come. But nothing is ever for certain in the financial markets, so today I'd like to discuss the following question: what could prevent a serious decline in home prices?

Rich Toscano

As I see it, there are two potential factors that could help out the housing market.

The first is economic growth. If home prices are too high in comparison to rents, incomes, and other fundamentals, then it's at least possible that those fundamental factors could rise to meet home prices rather than the other way around.

The problem is that this just isn't very likely. Home prices are so out of line with rents and incomes that, given the current pace of their growth, it would take many years for rents and incomes to catch up. Meanwhile, the oversupply of inventory (especially that of the must-sell variety) would be exerting downward pressure on prices the entire time.

The only way that economic growth could single-handedly bail out the housing market would be for regional economic activity, employment, and incomes to grow in great excess to their current levels. Such a gold-rush style boom is certainly within the realm of possibility, but it's not an outcome that I would consider likely.

The second factor that could aid housing market is government intervention.

We don't have to look back very far to spot a potential blueprint for the federal government's reaction to a housing-led slowdown. In the aftermath of the 2001 recession that followed the bursting of the stock market bubble, the Federal Reserve slashed short-term rates to levels not seen since the 1950s. Such ultra-low rates encouraged consumer borrowing that, in combination with rampant federal deficit spending, helped to keep overall demand aloft and to end the recession in fairly short order.

Of course, this technique had some unintended consequences (a housing bubble, record-shattering debt levels, and a structurally weak U.S. dollar come to mind). But I don't expect such nitpicking to stop the folks in Washington from using the same playbook again should the housing-related pain become too uncomfortable for their constituents to bear. Let's look at the actions of the Federal Reserve and Congress in turn.

The Federal Reserve will want to lower their short-term federal funds rate. In the case of a housing bust, lower short-term rate would be of key importance to the hordes of adjustable-rate mortgage holders who are facing higher payments once their loans reset. Jamming short-term rates back down to 2003 levels would certainly prevent a lot of foreclosures.

If things got bad enough and lowering the fed funds rates didn't do the trick, Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke could even implement some of the more radical policy suggestions he made in his seminal 2002 "helicopter drop" speech, such as setting long-term as well as short-term rates and directly intervening in the mortgage market.

It all sounds easy enough, but the truth is that the Fed can't lower rates (let alone enact any of Bernanke's proposed pull-out-the-stops policies) with impunity. Lowering short rates tends to cause the dollar to fall and inflation to rise. Here in 2007, the dollar is a lot weaker and inflation notably higher than in 2003 when the short-term rates plumbed their lowest depths. It's doubtful that the Fed could do anything as drastic as they did after the stock market bust, but it's still likely that they will lower rates to the extent that they are able.

For its part, the people in Congress can continue to do what they do best: spend money that they don't have. There have been few repercussions to such an approach so far, and until there are, the government can be expected to keep on spending -- especially if times get tougher. In general, borrowing from the future to spend in the present tends to provide a short-term stimulus to the economy. Given that "short-term" is the typical politician's favorite timeframe, this approach is a crowd favorite.

A housing bust would provide even further temptation to spend money directly on attempts to address the market itself. Some of our more eagerly opportunistic leaders are already scrambling to throw taxpayer money at the subprime mortgage problem, but the list of potential opportunities for federal largesse is nearly endless. Our leaders could stoke housing demand by offering tax breaks or direct subsidies to potential home buyers. They could help out struggling homeowners by increasing the already generous tax breaks that owners are granted. They could force lenders to extend mortgage teaser-rate periods or allow lower monthly payments for troubled owners. They could put a moratorium on foreclosures (an early variation on this theme is already taking place in Massachusetts, where the state is demanding that lenders delay the foreclosure process by up to two months for any borrower that files a complaint with state bank regulators). They could direct government-sponsored mortgage purchasers Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to loosen their standards to keep mortgage credit freely available. And if too many private lenders got into trouble, the government could affect an industry bailout as they did with the savings and loan industry in the late 1980s. The list goes on.

Keeping rates excessively low and increasing deficit spending could work for a more fundamental reason. Both activities tend to result in more money being created and spent into the economy. To the extent that there are more dollars chasing the same amount of goods, each dollar becomes worth less in comparison to those goods. This reduction in dollar purchasing power is more commonly known as "inflation."

If the government's tactics were to cause inflation to pick up the pace, incomes and rents might quickly rise in dollar terms. This could allow the fundamentals to catch up to home prices without the latter falling too steeply. It's not that great to own a home whose price is stagnating while the price of everything else is rising, but it's probably better than owning a home whose price is falling outright. (Of course, higher inflation would tend to increase interest rates, but as described above, various legislators and Fed chairman Bernanke have already pitched the idea of forcefully keeping mortgage rates low.)

The potential interventions are many, varied, and complex. And unlike an explosion of local economic growth, at least some degree of monetary easing and housing-oriented deficit spending will be almost inevitable if things get bad enough in the real estate market.

What effect the interventions will have is another question. Meddling with the market rarely works out exactly the way it was intended, as witnessed by the housing bubble and the other economic distortions caused by the government's stimulative efforts from 2001-2003. And as we've seen with the subprime debacle, the government rarely reacts to something until after it's a crisis, so there could be some issues of closing of metaphorical barn doors vis-à-vis the whereabouts of certain metaphorical horses.

We have a long way to go before home prices once again meet up with their fundamentals, and there's no way of knowing exactly what path will be followed to that destination. The point is that while there will likely be tremendous downward pressure on home prices, it's important to acknowledge that there could be some forces putting pretty serious pressure in the other direction.

Rich Toscano hosts the blog "A Nerd's Eye View" about housing and economic issues in San Diego. You can e-mail him at rich.toscano@voiceofsandiego.org or send a letter.




23 Comments so far on this story...

US taxpayers bailing out the people who took out "liar loans", were involved in fraudulent appraisal and "cash out" speculator schemes, and the greedy lenders who pushed many of those borrowers into bad morgages to begin with, is definitely not the answer. Let the market correct itself and finally bring overvalued home prices in line with reality. It would be nice if finally people who earn a living in San Diego would be able to buy a home here, without resorting to schemes that eventually make them lose everything.

Posted by Irv | reply to this comment
May 15, 2007 1:41 pm

US taxpayers bailing out the people who took out "liar loans", were involved in fraudulent appraisal and "cash out" speculator schemes, and the greedy lenders who pushed many of those borrowers into bad morgages to begin with, is definitely not the answer. Let the market correct itself and finally bring overvalued home prices in line with reality. It would be nice if finally people who earn a living in San Diego would be able to buy a home here, without resorting to schemes that eventually make them lose everything.

Posted by Irv | reply to this comment
May 15, 2007 1:58 pm

Very interesting article. However, I was wondering is it possible that the fundamentals you are using no longer apply? Has there ever been a Paradigm shift that would cause the relationship between rents, income and real estate prices to change? Wouldn't scarcity of land potentialy cause such a shift? Isn't the analysis you are presenting kind of a supply sider viewpoint?

Posted by Basic Civics | reply to this comment
May 15, 2007 8:33 pm

You mentioned that the Fed/Congress could forcefully keep mortgage rates down. From what I know, I disagree that this is possible. They could lower short term rates to help existing home-owners (with ARMS, etc...), but the impact here is to devalue the dollar. Doing so will cause long-term interest rates to rise, which, in turn will cause (long term) mortgate rates to rise in turn (to compete for investor's dollars)? No easy/simple solution.

Posted by Bearnanke | reply to this comment
May 15, 2007 10:25 pm

Inflating our way out of trouble has been a near universal pattern of solving financial problems since as far back as Weimar Germany. In our own country, we have had a history of "Continental Dollar". There is nothing to prevent a repeat of the same (as nearly happened in the '70s after removal of Gold Standard). Considering our dederal debt, slow but steady demonitization of US $ is the only peaceful way of settling our large and unsustainable public and private debts.

Posted by BSR | reply to this comment
May 15, 2007 11:44 pm

We need to get through to the powers that be that if they support these plans to "save" the housing market, they are actually DESTROYING any hope of home ownership prospects of new families, and the younger generations. The only way to actually SAVE the housing market it to get the prices down to a level that is supported by fundamentals. Get prices down to a level where (oh my god!) new families can actually afford to live. We need to change the whole political rhetoric to a theme of "Save Housing For The Families, Not For The Greedy Speculators."

Posted by BuyerWillEPB | reply to this comment
May 16, 2007 1:24 am

It would seem unlikely that a "gold rush" of financial prosperity could occur to rise to the level of current prices. But even if this could happen --what sector in SD could support that? It is understandable the housing market itself grew and sustained incomes to support the wild ride up. But now that it's declining, is there any other sector that has the same widespread bubble potential spread across low and high income groups?

Posted by DollarFray | reply to this comment
May 16, 2007 5:11 am

There is talk that the Fed could lower rates over Summer to get rid of the excess inventory. Wouldn't that still mean subprime loans? If people are using debt to survive for basic needs --what kind of loans would be available? And what kind of buyers are they? The lending market is tightening and has all the current fall-out to deal with. Are lenders in any position to extend more debt --even with the low rates (over Summer) being talked about?

Posted by DollarFray | reply to this comment
May 16, 2007 5:25 am

You forgot one other option...financial companies are getting homeowners nearing foreclosure out of adjustable rate mortgages into 40+ year mortgages. It stretches the loan and allows homeowners the ability to stay in their house, reduce their monthly mortage payment, reduce resale inventory, and keep home values at current levels. Once again the responsible home buyer waiting to buy a house at realistic home prices are screwed since that will never happen thanks to greedy home buyers and corrupt politicians.

Posted by R | reply to this comment
May 16, 2007 6:51 am

I expect a combination of factors to bring the market back into something like balance. Rates will decline, stimulating a new refinance boom, get out of jail card for some ATMers; the dollar will continue to weaken, increasing foreign investment in and supporting values in some desirable US RE markets (e.g. parts of SD, Bay Area, etc.) Continual 2-3% inflation will eat into real RE values as nominal prices decline slowly. However, affordable housing for lower income segment (a growing cohort) will remain hard to come by. Ownership rates will decline some. The rich will do fine (of course), the upper-middle will do OK, the middle class will shrink and struggle. Rents will eventually rise as well. Just my personal reading of the tea leaves. It will be interesting to see what actually happens.

Posted by NL | reply to this comment
May 16, 2007 8:24 am

I expect a combination of factors to bring the market back into something like balance. Rates will decline, stimulating a new refinance boom, get out of jail card for some ATMers; the dollar will continue to weaken, increasing foreign investment in and supporting values in some desirable US RE markets (e.g. parts of SD, Bay Area, etc.) Continual 2-3% inflation will eat into real RE values as nominal prices decline slowly. However, affordable housing for lower income segment (a growing cohort) will remain hard to come by. Ownership rates will decline some. The rich will do fine (of course), the upper-middle will do OK, the middle class will shrink and struggle. Rents will eventually rise as well. Just my personal reading of the tea leaves. It will be interesting to see what actually happens.

Posted by NL | reply to this comment
May 16, 2007 8:51 am

Now that the bubble is collapsing and prices are moving in the right direction, we need to think long and hard about ways to extricate housing from the hands of specuvestors and the agents/brokers who thrive off that market: during peak, fliptards were making $150k in a 6 month period! Why? Simply because everybody realized you COULD make $150k in a 6 month period! You'd be stupid NOT to! This bubble was started entirely by government policies: aside from interest rate shenanigans, Bush publicly praised zero-down loans as a means to encourage home ownership (which critics say encourages default:"buyers" have no skin in the game), Greenspan praised sub-prime innovations, and capital gains tax exclusions encouraged chasing windfall profits via flipping. Bush scuttled regulatory agencies = scant mortgage fraud investigations. Such policies NEVER were sustainable: change the policies, now that they had their desired effect.

Posted by Alain | reply to this comment
May 16, 2007 12:40 pm

"Crash2Deflation2Dep By 2010-2015=(vs.top) 50-70% off Homes 60-80% off condos+townhouss&0lo 80-95% off land, lots, acres 30-70% off commercial (all types) Experience=3 recessions & 3 Booms Real estate since high school(thanks dad) 1160% Avg. Gross profits last 10+ years 2 year Avg. hold last 10+ years 196 Repo deals last 10 years 49% Per Month Avg. Gross Return $100m in listings and transactions 66 countries Researched & Visited Reader 20k+pages/yr=law+eco BBA Finance+Real Estate Ccim Cria Cam Ems Gri xParalegal-Ca xTaxLicense-Ca xRealtor-CaHi xInsurance-CaHi xStockbroker-CaHi link

Posted by repo4sale | reply to this comment
May 16, 2007 9:19 pm

I believe prices will come down a little more in the next 6-18 months, but there are two things that are going to help stabilize prices. One is the Fed will start lowering rates this fall. That will bring adjustable rates down. The other is mortgages will start being 50 year fixed rate instead of 30 year. This happened in Japan and now the 50 year fixed rate mortgage is standard. I think home prices in San Diego will decline another 5% or so but then will flatten out for years.

Posted by Chuck L. | reply to this comment
May 16, 2007 9:46 pm

30 year fixed loan with 6.5% for a 780,000 home with 20% down: $3,922 monthly payment not including property taxes which run 1.25 - 1.5 in CA. 50 year fixed loan with 6.5% for a 780,000 home with 20% down: $3,498 not including property taxes which run 1.25 -1.5 in CA Property taxes will still run around $877 a month. Monthly Payment on 50 year over 30 year drops by $424 per month but individual with 50 year loan pays $839,673 more in interest.

Posted by SPR | reply to this comment
May 17, 2007 12:16 am

Doubt it, someone needs to pay the bill, and when it comes to balloon markets, the reality is not there. We don't need more problems, it's time for the one's who signed on the dotted line to pay the piper. It was all fun and games until the bills came due. Who bails out the rest of us who also want the good life, but didn't make the foolish mistakes these homeowners made? The price of bad mistakes is wisdom. We shouldn't have to pay for others greedy, opportunistic mistakes, AND, we shouldn't pay for their manipulating the system. We have too many victims, not enough responsibility for our actions. Many of us did NOT succumb to greed and desire because we were honest in knowing our limitations, and that we have responsibility and accountability for our actions. Why should those who CHOSE to sign on the

Posted by Debra | reply to this comment
May 17, 2007 6:54 am

Democracy is governed by numbers not morals. I think we will see a number of shady deals surrounding housing soon. Corporations don't make campagin contributions just to be nice.

Posted by Loren | reply to this comment
May 18, 2007 3:37 am

"The Last 30 Days (Apr'07 data)" publishes price trends for Santa Clara County at: link Coming soon: a breakdown of the implied size of the 2005, 2006 and now 2007 median house... Thanks!

Posted by vfsv | reply to this comment
May 20, 2007 12:39 am

Today's new housing numbers (volume way up, price way down) make it unlikely that the Fed will lower interest rates. Instead, I think we're likely to see further drops in existing home prices.

Posted by Ashby | reply to this comment
May 24, 2007 6:07 am

couple of things: long term rates are the important factor and those are set in the marketplace. even if the Fed desired lower rates and used its power to lower short term rates, long term rates might not come down. i think most people underestimate how much the Fed is a follower of the market and not a leader. i guess people like to believe someone's in charge. policy is not irrelevant but much less powerful than most believe (in my estimation). as far as government intervention goes: tax rates could be lowered to increase incomes, but govt. discipline is not there to reduce expenditures which would drive rates up....this won't work. targeted cuts in property taxes could help, but again the local municipalities are mostly irresponsible with spending so it won't happen. unfortunately economic growth probably can't work due to the housing fall (vicious cycle issue). john.

Posted by john ewing | reply to this comment
May 26, 2007 3:54 am

What could save the current housing market? So how about, What could save the Great Depression of 29? What could save the dot com collapse? What could save Pearl Harbor? The list goes on and on. There are booms and there are busts. Coulda? Woudlda? Shoulda?

Posted by john | reply to this comment
May 31, 2007 2:34 am

Actually, the answer to this question is simple. Keep loaning people a LOT more money than they can afford to repay, then forgive the majority of the debt when they (naturally) default. This will keep prices high. I am not sure what kind of business model this is, but hey this is America, why not!

Posted by GH | reply to this comment
May 31, 2007 8:41 am

I think the powers that be wanted this correction and will allow the housing market to bleed. They may do things to help, but rate cuts take several months to filter through and we need a correction. We are in a bad situation and they have to be very careful, high inflation will hurt much more than a couple mil people feeling the housing pain and remember It’s not suppose to spill into the broader economy, too much we lose the dollar. I see a lot of pain, and a hard, soft landing with prices higher than a total crash and higher than a bust, or much lower than today but higher than most can pay and more people will leave CA. A recession is also in the cards but we will only know that once they tell us.

Posted by ar | reply to this comment
June 1, 2007 9:02 am


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