After All This, Homes Still Overpriced
Despite the fact that home prices have weathered a significant decline, San Diego homes remain quite expensive in comparison to their historical relationship with rents and incomes.
The following chart shows the ratio of a typical San Diego single family home price (as measured by the Case-Shiller Home Price Index and rebased to the December 2008 median price) in comparison to per capita San Diego income:
The first notable thing about this chart is that, up until the recent bubble, the price-to-income ratio had stayed within a relatively compact range.
The second notable thing is that the ratio got so out of whack during the most recent bubble that, even now, it is still well above its historical range.
A similar pattern can be seen with the ratio of home prices to average monthly rents:
The price-to-income ratio would have to fall 13% from here just to get down to the level of the 1990 bubble peak. The price-to-rent ratio would have to fall 20% from current levels to get to the 1990 peak.
To get to the levels seen during the post-bubble 1996 trough, the price-to-income ratio would have to fall another 40% from here and the price-to-rent ratio another 36%.
People often argue that today's lower interest rates justify higher price-to-income and price-to-rent ratios. But the next charts (the same as above but with 30-year fixed mortgage rates overlaid) show that up until the recent bubble, the ratios have generally tended to peak and trough at very similar levels despite substantially different interest rate climates over time:
The fact that interest rate levels didn't seem to exert a big effect on home valuations in prior cycles suggests that something else was responsible for blowing these ratios out of the water during the last bubble. The prime suspect, in my opinion, is not a low interest rate but a multi-year period of incredibly reckless mortgage underwriting enabled by the great securitization boom.
Now that EZ-credit is no longer with us, home valuations may eventually return to normalcy after all. But we certainly aren't there yet.
-- RICH TOSCANO

|
Hey Teachers, When Did You Start Working?:
With jobs at stake, union advises teachers not to answer.
Saturday, March 8 -- 8:21 am
San Diego Schools Review, Revise Cuts:
A new proposal trims less from the central office.
Friday, March 7 -- 6:05 pm
Profiling the Salton Sea:
High Country News looks at the Salton Sea's challenges -- and personalities.
Friday, March 7 -- 5:48 pm
SURVIVAL IN SAN DIEGOGrant Breakdown :
$200K in federal funds now for retraining laid-off San Diego mortgage workers, with the possibility of more later.
Friday, March 7 -- 2:54 pm
LETTERS TO THE EDITORFolly of Teachers Unions:
The unions are only useful to their bosses and to not-so-good teachers.
Friday, March 7 -- 6:36 pm
CAFÉ SAN DIEGOWhy Stay?:
What keeps women in abusive relationships.
Friday, March 7 -- 12:21 pm
COMMENTARY: SLOPGaylord and the Power Plant :
The convention giant's senior VP declines to say one way or the other about their compatibility.
Friday, March 7 -- 4:19 pm
COMMENTARY: RICH TOSCANOMedian Home Prices Pummeled in February :
February was the worst month yet by far for the median-based price indicators.
Friday, March 7 -- 5:44 pm
|
|
|
Stem Cell Company's Research Saved by Windfall:
Funding helps for now, but more will be needed to test therapies.
Thursday, August 21, 2008 -- 1:07 pm
Maienschein Backs Goldsmith:
The city councilman backs his former opponent in the city attorney's race.
Wednesday, August 20, 2008 -- 5:30 pm
Hueso: Keep Geisler:
The city councilman says he will re-nominate Rich Geisler to the SEDC board.
Wednesday, August 20, 2008 -- 2:31 pm
SURVIVAL IN SAN DIEGOWalking Away:
Local foreclosure-as-choice company says it's growing.
Wednesday, August 20, 2008 -- 6:14 pm
LETTERS TO THE EDITORGaylord's Not-So-Gay Side:
The hotel chain's Grapevine, Texas project just won't stop.
Wednesday, August 20, 2008 -- 7:21 pm
CAFÉ SAN DIEGOSan Diego De-Unified?:
How the teachers union seems more concerned about maintaining its power play than uniting its members.
Thursday, August 21, 2008 -- 1:11 pm
COMMENTARY: SLOPThe Pam Anderson 'Web Page':
The Chula Vista city manager is caught surfing 'Web pages.'
Tuesday, August 19, 2008 -- 6:38 pm
COMMENTARY: RICH TOSCANOPunish the Savers:
Savers are watching their real wealth disappear for the benefit of the housing market and financial industry.
Tuesday, August 19, 2008 -- 6:04 pm
|
|
|
 |