Tags: homebuilders | economy | stagnant | subprime

Homebuilders Would Be Busier If Economy Were Really All That Strong

By    |   Monday, 28 March 2016 06:44 AM EDT

There is one part missing from the narrative sketched out in home resales being subjected to monetary imbalance. It is a compelling explanation for what we find as the most striking aspect of existing home sales: namely, the curious lack of depth among sellers.

It’s as if despite rising prices there is a seller strike where a significant part of what should be that market just will not participate.

The likely explanation is serious stratification. In other words, prices are rising much faster in the more expensive segments, leaving those in either starter homes or still the lower tiers unable to make the usual jump that accompanies economic mobility.

Because they aren’t buying upward, they aren’t selling despite rising prices which are supposed to signal at least stable demand.

That’s the part that demands further examination.

Where Are the New Homes?

There is another subset of housing that is supposed to act in that circumstance – new homes.

If there weren’t enough supply from resales as the National Association of Realtors suggests, thwarting a more consistent and healthy home market, then homebuilders should have been the answer.

This isn’t an imbalance that just showed up, it has been a factor for at least several years. In all likelihood, it was throughout the mini-bubble inspired by the Federal Reserve’s quantitative easing stimulus programs that favored “investors” over potential resident owners.

Where are the home builders?

If there is demand for even starter homes well above the visible and attainable supply, that is exactly the market imbalance that should favor new construction.

Instead, outside of what increasingly looks to be a one-off rise in new home sales in 2014, home sales have been rather stagnant.

All the way back to June 2013, the Commerce Department has been estimating new home sales at around 500,000 almost as if that were an anchor or fixation.

There have been revisions here and there redrawing the exact trajectory, but for the most part ever since then new home sales have been stuck around that level – especially since the start of 2015.

Given the issues here and the potential signals for imbalance, 500,000 wouldn’t even be that much of a supply factor. That level has been at the extreme lower edge of the historical range once signaling recession-type conditions.

Two Explanations

Since home builders react to actual demand rather than the published unemployment rate, that can only mean two potential deficiencies:

First, either there is some demand that would be consistent with what is suggested via resales, those looking for starter or lower tier homes, only they can’t obtain mortgages

Second, there just isn’t demand at the lower end in anything resembling the more frenzied activity in luxury markets.

In reality, the past three years might be explained as a combination of the two, where there was once some demand around 2013 and into 2014 but banks were at that time reeling from taper and cutting all things mortgage.

By the time finance stabilized a lower volume, it was just in time for the “rising dollar” and the economic consequences captured by all economic accounts except the unemployment rate.

The gap from resales suggests that home builders should be nearing a frenzy, constructing at a pace more toward the upper end of the historical range rather than continuing along the bottom, if still better than the worst of the housing crash.

No Rush to Build


Only there isn’t any rush to build and sell new dwellings apart from rentals.

It is both the bifurcation that erupts anywhere monetary policy manages some intervention, as well as consistent with what we actually see in the economy outside Fed Chair Janet Yellen’s imagination.

It is very much like what seems to be taking place in autos except with unusual constraint this time; perhaps the housing bust had an effect after all?

In other words, economic conditions are so deficient and income so lacking that that the only way people are buying automobiles is with subprime loans.

In housing, that is also the case, but subprime is mostly dead, meaning that there are instead no sales or at best minimal volume.

Autos are reaching record levels, but houses curiously do not even though both are drawing from largely the same pool.

In both cases, it doesn’t suggest anything about positive economic prospects let alone the “best jobs market in decades.” In terms of housing, if there is a “hole” in the overall supply, new homes to resales, it seems a reflection of true demand conditions.

Jeff Snider is head of global investment research for Alhambra Investment Partners, a registered investment advisory based in Palmetto Bay, Florida.




© 2024 Newsmax Finance. All rights reserved.


JeffSnider
There is one part missing from the narrative sketched out in home resales being subjected to monetary imbalance. It is a compelling explanation for what we find as the most striking aspect of existing home sales: namely, the curious lack of depth among sellers.
homebuilders, economy, stagnant, subprime
776
2016-44-28
Monday, 28 March 2016 06:44 AM
Newsmax Media, Inc.

Sign up for Newsmax’s Daily Newsletter

Receive breaking news and original analysis - sent right to your inbox.

(Optional for Local News)
Privacy: We never share your email address.
Join the Newsmax Community
Read and Post Comments
Please review Community Guidelines before posting a comment.
 
Get Newsmax Text Alerts
TOP

Newsmax, Moneynews, Newsmax Health, and Independent. American. are registered trademarks of Newsmax Media, Inc. Newsmax TV, and Newsmax World are trademarks of Newsmax Media, Inc.

NEWSMAX.COM
MONEYNEWS.COM
© Newsmax Media, Inc.
All Rights Reserved
NEWSMAX.COM
MONEYNEWS.COM
© Newsmax Media, Inc.
All Rights Reserved