Real estate is the No. 1 form of wealth for most people. However, as the last housing bubble and recession have shown, real estate isn't always a safe investment. Housing prices peaked in 2006 before falling to a 2011 bottom in the aftermath of the biggest economic decline since the Great Depression.
Since then, home prices have skyrocketed to new highs thanks to federally sponsored low-interest mortgages. In fact, home prices have risen so much, so fast that Americans have almost forgotten the foreclosure crisis of 2008-09 and ensuing Great Recession.
Today, things are different. Home prices are only going up. At least, that seems to be the prevailing thought.
But what if things were happening under the surface that had the potential to torpedo home prices just like a decade ago? A quick survey of interest rates reveals a hidden danger lurking in the real estate market.
Treasury Yields on the Rise Again
Today, it looks like history could be repeating itself. The two-year and three-year Treasuries jumped on Friday to 2.06 percent and 2.20 percent, respectively. However, it was the rise in the 10-year yield to 2.66 percent that is most important to homeowners and people invested in real estate. This rate is the benchmark for the financial markets, and it has the greatest impact on mortgage rates.
A chart on Wolf Street shows this is its highest level since April 2014 and more than double the historic intraday low of 1.32 percent it fell to on July 7, 2016.
Though the corporate bond market, junk bonds, and the stock market have been unaffected by this recent change, the mortgage market is feeling the strain. As was reported in Wolf Street:
“On Friday, the average 30-year fixed-rate mortgage with conforming loan balances ($417,000 or less) for top-tier borrowers, according to Mortgage News Daily, ended at 4.23%, the highest in nine months.”
Depending on household budgets, this can have a big effect on people’s ability to meet their mortgage payments. A jump from 3.5 percent to 4.5 percent, for example, could mean an extra $144 a month in payment for a $250,000 mortgage. This “payment differential” obviously increases the bigger the mortgage, and can result in several hundreds of dollars extra in payments each month.
Whereas falling mortgage rates tend to increase the value of homes, an increasing rate would do the exact opposite. As interest rates creep up, they force home prices down.
And to add to real estate market woes, real mortgage rates are likely to grow beyond 4.5 percent as the Fed continues to hike its rates and long-term yields catch up with the trajectory of shorter-term yields.
Another Foreclosure Crisis on the Way?
You don’t have to be a rocket scientist to see that the writing is on the wall for the real estate market. As Wolf Street puts it, higher mortgage interest rates will likely push home prices down, causing current homeowners to lose equity and possibly go upside down on their mortgages.
Under these conditions, potential buyers would probably wait longer to buy once they see prices start to drop. This will only accelerate price deterioration as home sellers slash prices to get out as quickly as they can.
This could eventually result in a foreclosure crisis even more devastating than the last one, which was one of the primary effects of the 2008/2009 recession.
With the real estate market looking vulnerable to a big drop, is there any other asset you can buy that has strong potential to appreciate over the next few years?
Yes, there is.
With stocks and bonds also at the mercy of rising yields, one of the few assets with strong potential to rise in value over the next few years is gold. It is relatively immune from Treasury yields and will likely grow in value as the dollar continues to fall.
Peter Reagan is a financial market strategist at Birch Gold Group. As the Precious Metal IRA Specialists, Birch Gold helps Americans protect their retirement savings with physical gold and silver.
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