Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Housing, Household Tenure Choice, and the Locations We Choose A Home for Everyone Conference 2014 Presented by: Mark J. Eppli Interim Keyes Dean and Bell Chair in Real Estate Marquette University July 16, 2014 GDP and Jobs The U.S. has maintained historically weak GDP growth in the 2000s at 1.83%, versus 3.25% for the period 19802000 . . . . Source: Federal Reserve of St. Louis. . . . . which bring us to jobs . . . . Source: St. Louis Federal Reserve. . . . . however, the unemployment rate is not the whole story, labor force participation rates are a concern . . . . Source: St. Louis Federal Reserve . . . . and the U.S. labor force participation rate declines are in the young adult cohorts . . . . Source: Vanguard’s Economic and Investment Outlook, January 2014, 16. . . . . unemployment is not an equally distributed . . . . Source: St. Louis Federal Reserve GDP and employment take-aways: • U.S. GDP growth is slowly growing; • Unemployment rate declines overstate the health of the jobs market; • Much labor force slack exists; • High school graduates struggle to find familysupporting job; and • Without solid job growth there will not be household growth Wealth and Income Net worth is back. Home prices were up 13.6% in 2013 and stocks had their best year since 1997 with a 31.9% total return increasing household wealth. ... Source: WSJ, December 10, 2013, A2. . . . . however the net worth of U.S. families is highly concentrated . . . . Source: Marty Hart-Landsberg, Lewis and Clark University. . . . . Net worth of the bottom portion of the wealth spectrum is heavily housewealth dependent and 18.8% of houses are underwater . . . Source: Pew Research Center. . . . . 39% of households have less than $25,000 in net worth . . . . . . . . making a 20% house down payment is unreachable for 39% of households . . . . Source: National Association of Realtors . . . .which limits existing home sales . . . . Source: National Association of Realtors . . . . real compensation has been stagnant since 1973, making debt service payments more difficult . . . . Source: Lawrence Mishel, Economic Policy Institute, April 26, 2012. Wealth and income take-aways: • Net worth of U.S. households now exceeds 2007 in real and nominal terms; • 28% of the U.S. net worth is held by the bottom 90% of the population; • 39% of households have a net worth of less than $25,000; • Real compensation has stagnated; • Which limits housing sales and house price growth. Interest Rates and Inflation Mortgage interest rates remain low . . . . Source: St. Louis Federal Reserve . . . . due to low inflation in the U.S. Over the past 20 years inflation averaged 1.88% . . . . . Source: Federal Reserve of St. Louis. . . . . with ample labor, unit labor costs are wellbehaved . . . . Source: Federal Reserve of St. Louis. . . . . and commodity prices are relatively stable. . . . Source: Federal Reserve of St. Louis. . . . . longer-term interest rate should remain range bound in the +/-2.54% 10-UST rate given the generally slack labor markets and continued productivity that generate low global and U.S. inflation. Mortgage Underwriting Underwriting standards have not eased . . . . Source: Wall Street Journal, March 22, 2014. . . . . a closer look at recent tightening of underwriting standards . . . . Source: Wall Street Journal, June 9, 2014. . . . . more evidence of tight lending markets . . . . Source: Federal Reserve of St. Louis. . . . . which ultimately limits new entrants to the market . . . . . . . . with the lock-in effect limiting new home sellers willing to list their homes for sale . . . . Household mobility falls by 7.5 percent for every percent increase in interest rates. Source: Research by Shilling and Hendershott, Washington Post, March 22, 2014. . . . . however, household debt service as a percent of disposable income remains very low . . . . Source: Federal Reserve of St. Louis. Mortgage underwriting take aways: • Mortgage underwriting standards tightened in 20072010; • Underwriting standards have not eased much since; • Limiting new entrants to the housing market. Single-Family Housing Market Fundamentals Home prices are at pre-bubble levels . . . . . . . . with the excess supply of homes absorbed . . . . Source: Federal Reserve of St. Louis. . . . . and a dearth of new single-family housing coming to the market . . . . Source: Federal Reserve of St. Louis. . . . . homeownership rates have fallen back to pre-bubble levels as well . . . . Source: Federal Reserve of St. Louis. . . . . household formation has significant pent up demand . . . . Source: Joint Center for Housing Studies, State of the Nation’s Housing: 2013. . . . . minorities and seniors will drive most all household demand growth in the coming decade . . . . Source: Joint Center for Housing Studies, State of the Nation’s Housing: 2013. . . . . “married couple” households have declined dramatically over time . . . . Percent "Other Family" and "Non-Family" Households 60.0% 50.0% 40.0% 30.0% 20.0% 10.0% 0.0% 1948 1953 1958 1963 1968 1973 1978 1983 1988 1993 1998 2003 2008 2013 Source: Census and Marquette University. . . . . the supply of multifamily starts averaged 360,000 since 1956, a level we are now reaching replacement equilibrium rates . . . . Source: Federal Reserve of St. Louis. Housing market fundamentals take-aways: • • • • Prices are at pre-bubble levels; Market supply and demand are in equilibrium; Pent up demand exists for new households; However, new household formation skews toward rental housing. Challenges of the First-time Homebuyer Employment growth for the first-time homebuyer’s lags . . . . Source: St. Louis Federal Reserve . . . .unemployment rates for high school graduates remaining high . . . . Source: St. Louis Federal Reserve . . . . and the average college graduate with the average student loan debt is straddled with $366 per month (assumes a 6% rate, 10 year term) Source: Wall Street Journal, June 14, 2014 . . . . many high school and college graduates living at with their parents. . . . . . . . and marriage is coming later in life . . . . Source: U.S. Census. . . . . which leaves the housing market prospects for the first-time homebuyer challenged. . . . Source: WSJ May 24-25, 2014, p. A2. First-time homebuyer take-aways: • Employment growth for the 25-34 age cohorts has been non-existent; • The high school graduate continues to struggle with employment and real wage growth; • College graduates face of growing student loan payments; • Leaving the first-time homebuyer market tenuous. The owner-occupied market has both headwinds/tailwinds: Headwinds • • • • • • Owning a home may no longer be the American Dream; GDP growth and labor force participation rate concerns remain; Stagnant wealth and income levels for most; Tighter underwriting – higher FICO scores; First-time homebuyers remain challenged; Increasing house prices Tailwinds • • • • Single-family market fundamentals are solid Markets are at pre-bubble levels Markets are in equilibrium Mortgage interest rate remain low Housing, Household Tenure Choice, and the Locations We Choose A Home for Everyone Conference 2014 Presented by: Mark J. Eppli Interim Keyes Dean and Bell Chair in Real Estate Marquette University July 16, 2014