Turmoil in
the housing market has led to fears that home prices
will drop precipitously, particularly if foreclosures
force large numbers of homes onto the market in the
coming year. Recently, these fears have driven financial
stocks down and led to the government rescue of Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac. But the projected losses have been
wildly exaggerated. Most Americans have not experienced
any significant decline in the value of their homes
— nor are they likely to.
Only four states — Arizona, California, Florida
and Nevada — have had declines of more than 4%
in home prices over the past year, according to the
house price index of the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise
Oversight. Some worry that OFHEO's index may be missing
the full extent of the crisis because it doesn't include
very high-priced homes with "jumbo" mortgages
or homes bought with subprime loans — the ones
being hit hardest. While one could argue that the index
would be more representative if it included these transactions,
the properties it does include represent more than three-quarters
of U.S. homes.
The OFHEO index provides broad coverage of large and
small markets across the country, and each home is weighted
equally. Furthermore, excluding subprime mortgages has
an advantage — doing so makes the index a more
representative measure of the homes owned by middle-class
families. Fire-sale prices from distressed sales of
subprime mortgages exaggerate the declines that patient
sellers are likely to experience.
This spring, it was much reported that the Standard
& Poor's/Case-Shiller housing price index recorded
a 14.1% decline from March 2007 to March 2008, and there
is every indication that the index's June results will
also be down significantly. But this is a poor measure
of what is happening to the value of most homes. The
Case-Shiller index includes no data from 13 states (representing
11% of the U.S. housing stock) and offers only partial
coverage of 29 others (with 79% of U.S. housing). Homes
in the areas omitted or incompletely covered appreciated
at a slower pace during the housing boom, and their
values have been more resilient over the past two years,
so the data behind the index are biased toward the markets
most susceptible to dramatic swings.
Also, the Case-Shiller index weights transactions by
value. For example, it gives eight times as much weight
to the sale of an $800,000 home as it does to a $100,000
home, meaning it is particularly sensitive to what is
happening with high-priced homes in the largest, most
expensive markets.
But even if price declines have been small so far,
how can one gauge whether the increase in foreclosures
will lead to accelerating decline? In our own research,
we use quarterly historical (1981-2007) state-level
data on the OFHEO price index, foreclosures, home sales,
permits and employment to explore how foreclosure shocks
affect future home prices.
We conclude that declines in house prices are highly
likely to remain small. Our analysis reveals, unsurprisingly,
that foreclosures and home prices have negative effects
on each other over time, but this does not imply a vicious
cycle of collapsing prices. Our models predict that
as foreclosures continue to climb in many states, house
prices will remain flat or decline in those states —
but will not collapse.
One reason for this is that the effect of foreclosure
shocks on house prices is small. Furthermore, other
fundamental factors (such as employment growth and a
slowing of the growth of the housing supply over the
past year and a half) will cushion the impact of foreclosures.
We constructed several forecasting models. Even under
an extreme worst-case scenario for foreclosures, our
conclusion was that U.S. house prices just aren't going
to fall by very much in the next two years. In our worst-case
scenario, the average cumulative decline is about 5%,
and only 12 states experience declines greater than
6% by the end of 2009.
The fact that home prices will remain stable does not
imply that the housing downturn has been trivial. Indeed,
the price stickiness has been reflected in the lower
sales volumes and declining housing starts that we have
witnessed for over a year. These factors have already
slowed GDP growth. Many developers and financial institutions
have been badly hurt. And some home owners who had the
misfortune to buy in the hottest markets have experienced
significant declines in value and will experience further
declines.
But fears of a huge loss in home values for most home
owners — and especially for middle-income home
owners — across the United States, and fears of
the devastating losses by financial institutions that
would accompany them, are greatly overblown.
Charles W. Calomiris is Henry Kaufman professor of
financial institutions at Columbia University and a
visiting research fellow at the American Enterprise
Institute. Stanley D. Longhofer directs the Center for
Real Estate at Wichita State University's business school.
William Miles is an associate professor of economics
and Barton fellow at Wichita State.
Source: www.nbnnews.com, August
11, 2008
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