Showing posts with label Housing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Housing. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Wealth Effects

I seldom agree with Dean Baker, but here he has a good point.
This is truly incredible. Homeowners have lost more than $5 trillion in housing wealth. There is a very well established wealth effect whereby $1 of housing wealth is estimated as leading to 5 to 6 cents of annual consumption. This implies that the loss of wealth to date would cause consumption to fall by $250 billion to $300 billion annually (1.7 percent to 2.0 percent of GDP). If you add in the loss of around $6 trillion in stock wealth, with an estimated wealth effect of 3-4 cents on the dollar, then you get an additional decline of $180 billion to $240 billion in annual consumption (1.2 percent to 1.6 percent of GDP).

These are huge falls in consumption that would lead to a very serious recession, like the one we are seeing. This would be predicted even if all our banks were fully solvent and in top flight financial shape. Even the soundest bank does not make loans to borrowers who it does not think can pay the loans back (except during times of irrational exuberance).

Saturday, September 06, 2008

Shiller

You have to love Shiller's genius even if you don't share his point of view.

Saturday, August 30, 2008

Foreclosure Filing Rate and The Unemployment Rate

The graph below shows the county's unemployment rate, and the foreclosure filing rate, with the size of the bubbles proportional to the population of the county. A larger version can be found here.

Friday, September 28, 2007

Seasonal Effects in Housing

Econbrowser has some bad news about the current housing market:
In a typical year, most new home sales occur between March and August. In each of those months we usually might expect 35% more homes to be sold than at the seasonal low in December. This August, home sales were actually less than in December, the first time that's happened in the 44 years these numbers are available.
For comparison, using MLS data on home sales, the 7 Rivers Region saw 102 listings sold in December of 2006, while August of 2007 saw 155 listings sold. That is a 52% increase. Although August 2007 is 11% below August 2006, at least its not below December of 2006!