Deciphering Smoke Signals |
March 21, 2006 |
Freddie Mac Economic and Housing Outlook
For many months economists have been speculating that the housing market was about to change course – from a seller's market to a buyer's market, from a bubble to a bust. Yet the statistics refuse to definitively indicate the direction of the market. The Conventional Mortgage Home Price Index for the fourth quarter of 2005, released March 2nd, showed that annual growth in home values hit 13 percent nationally. Housing starts in January hit 2.28 million units, the highest pace since 1973. No signals of a cooling housing market here. But sales of both new and existing homes fell in January and the inventories of existing single-family homes and condominiums for-sale rose to their highest levels since 1999. These contradictory statistics are signs of a slow down.
Some local market evidence is less ambiguous. Phoenix continues to be the hottest housing market with fourth-quarter 2004 to fourth-quarter 2006 appreciation in excess of 41 percent. Its booming economy created 82,000 non-farm payroll jobs in 2005 out of the nearly 2 million added nationwide. In contrast, Las Vegas, which had been the hottest market in 2004, saw home-price appreciation slow quickly to near the national average growth rate. Michigan saw the slowest price growth among states reflecting the weak economy caused by the downturn in the manufacturing sector.
It may be some time before we see definite trends in the national housing market, especially as measured by changes in home prices. Prices tend to be "sticky" on the way down as sellers will leave a home on the market longer or offer non-price concessions to buyers. The prevalence and types of seller concessions are difficult to measure. Nonetheless, we believe the housing market crested during the third quarter of 2005 and that single-digit growth in home values will occur nationally in 2006.
The national economy in the first quarter of 2006 is expected to bounce back strongly from the hurricane-battered, dismal showing in the fourth quarter. Although fourth quarter real GDP growth was revised upwards to 1.6 percent, productivity growth fell for the first time since the first quarter of 2001 while labor costs accelerated to 3.3 percent on an annualized basis, the biggest jump in a year and troubling for those worried about accelerating inflation risks. First quarter GDP growth is looking to come in near 4.8 percent, and the market is already pricing in another one-quarter point increase in the federal funds rate when the Fed Open Market Committee meets again at the end of March, moving the fed funds rate to 4.75 percent and the prime rate to 7.75 percent.
The yield curve has remained inverted, with 2-year Treasury yields exceeding the yields on 10-year notes. The inversion has caused fully indexed interest rates on 1-year adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs) to exceed those on 30-year fixed-rate mortgages (FRMs) by more than a full percentage point – the fully indexed rate is the rate obtained by adding the margin to the appropriate underlying index rate at today's levels. With the inverted yield curve, the ARM share of new mortgage applications is high at 32 percent, but initial-rate teaser discounts are attracting borrowers to shorter-term ARMs and interest-only or option-payment features on longer-term ARMs are attracting borrowers with lower initial mortgage payments. Fixed mortgage rates are still historically low and a wide variety of mortgage products are available, which means the capital market is well positioned to support homebuyers. When the smoke clears, we expect to find that the housing market has decelerated to a more normal level of activity, not crashed.
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Source: Freddie Mac
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