Is the housing market stabilizing?
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The housing market remained depressed over the last month but appears to have stabilized at the bottom of the cycle. Housing starts and sales have both increased slightly since December, inventories of homes for sales have declined significantly and homebuilders have slowed work on homes under construction. Home prices are now falling quickly, a necessary condition to bring buyers back into the market.
The turnabout from collapse to recovery is likely to take several months before it is fully established. Materials, equipment and service suppliers to housing will not realize measurable and sustainable sales increases until the end of spring at the earliest.
Home affordability has jumped to a level consistent with housing starts 75% higher than currently but this positive impact is on hold until consumer confidence rises from the current recession level reading. How quickly housing starts recover depends on how long and deep the economic recession is. Our outlook is for the recession to end in June or July which will provide the boost in consumer confidence needed to spur home sales.
Note that the outlook is for the direction of change to be positive by midyear but also for the level of activity in housing to remain depressed well below average beyond 2009.
The mortgage market problems that set off the housing collapse are now well enough on the mend that credit access and cost trends are contribution to a stronger rather than a weaker housing market. Nonetheless the aftermath of the mortgage mess will keep housing activity at a depressed level for several years even though activity at the job site begins to expand soon.
This restraint takes two forms. First, most of the anticipated foreclosures have yet to occur. As they occur they will add to the surplus of homes for sale. Second, more than 10% of homeowners are unable to move to a new house because the plunge in home prices has pushed owner equity below the market value of the home.
Housing Market Monitor — March 2008
| Consumer buying power | Latest Month | Previous Month/Qtr. | Year Ago | 12 Month Average | ||
| Affordability - 30-Y Mortgage | NAR Index | Feb | 134.6 | 131.0 | 114.0 | 116.0 |
| Affordability - 1-Y ARM Mortgage | NAR Index | Feb | 142 | 134.1 | 115.6 | 119.0 |
| Consumer income growth (3 mo. annualized % change) |
US Commerce Dept. | Feb | 4.3 | 4.1 | 8.8 | 5.5 |
| Consumer real income growth (3 mo. annualized % change) |
US Commerce Dept. | Feb | 0.6 | -0.6 | 5.3 | 1.8 |
| Employment (000's jobs per month) | US Labor Dept. | Mar | -80 | -76 | 177 | 45 |
| 30-Y fixed mortgage rate (Freddie Mac) | Freddie Mac | Mar | 5.92 | 5.76 | 6.16 | 6.26 |
| 1-Y ARM (Freddie Mac) | Freddie Mac | Mar | 5.03 | 5.23 | 5.44 | 5.48 |
| Consumer Confidence Index | Conference Board | Mar | 64.5 | 76.4 | 108.2 | 94.9 |
| Household net worth growth (annual % change) |
Federal Reserve Board | 3rd Q | 7.30 | 8.10 | 8.60 | 7.10 |
| New home construction | ||||||
| Permits (000's, annualized) | US Census Bureau | Feb | 978 | 1,061 | 1,541 | 1282 |
| Sales (000's, annualized) | US Census Bureau | Feb | 590 | 601 | 840 | 729 |
| Starts (000's, annualized) | US Census Bureau | Feb | 1,065 | 1,071 | 1,487 | 1281 |
| Homes under construction (000's, annualized) |
US Census Bureau | Feb | 1,028 | 1,039 | 1,208 | 1115 |
| Homes completed (000's, annualized) | US Census Bureau | Feb | 1,208 | 1,324 | 1,628 | 1439 |
| New home inventory | US Census Bureau | Feb | 471,000 | 481,000 | 540,000 | 519,500 |
| Total new home inventory (month supply) |
US Census Bureau | Feb | 9.8 | 9.8 | 8.1 | 8.8 |
| Home sale price (median) | US Census Bureau | Feb | $244,100 | $225,600 | $250,800 | $240,642 |
| Residential materials cost | US Labor Dept. | Feb | 2.7 | 1.6 | 0.8 | 2.5 |
| Residential contractor hourly wage | US Labor Dept. | Feb | 1.8 | 3.0 | 4.0 | 3.7 |
| Housing market index | NAHB | Mar | 20 | 20 | 36 | 23 |
| Existing home competition | ||||||
| Pending home sales index (2001 = 100) |
NAHB | Jan | 85.9 | 85.9 | 108.5 | 84.9 |
| Home inventory (months supply) | NAR | Feb | 9.6 | 10.2 | 6.9 | 9.5 |
| Homes sold (000's annualized) | NAR | Feb | 5,030 | 4,890 | 6,600 | 5,417 |
| Median existing home sales price | NAR | Feb | $195,900 | $199,700 | $213,500 | 214,217 |
| Median home price index (ex. Subprime +mortgages over $417,000) | OFHEO | 4th Q | 276.4 | 283.2 | 278.9 | 281.4 |
| Median home sales price index (20 large cities only) |
MacroMarkets | Jan | 180.67 | 184.666 | 202.32 | 195.12 |
| Remodeling | ||||||
| Remodeling contractor hours worked (not sea. adj.) | US Labor Dept. | Jan | 42,156 | 43,249 | 43,854 | 47,421 |
| Mortgage refinancing applications index | MBA | Feb | 2756.4 | 3365.8 | 2030.2 | 2318.7 |
| NAHB remodeling index | NAHB | 4th Q | 40.9 | 46.2 | 48.2 | 44.5 |
| Leading Index of Remodeling Activity | Harvard Joint Center | 4th Q | -1.2 | -0.4 | 6.8 | -0.2 |
Abbreviations: NAR = National Association of Realtors; NAHB = National Association of Home Builders;
OFHEO = Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight.
Table: Reed Construction Data and Reed Construction Data - CanaData.


