Used Home Sales Rise Everywhere - Analyst Blog

In November, existing home sales ran at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.68 million. That pace is 5.6% higher than in October, and 27.9% below the year-ago rate. The year-ago rate of 6.49 million was inflated as everyone was rushing to get the deals done before they thought the first-time buyer tax credit would expire.

The tax credit was unexpectedly extended (and expanded) at the last minute. Thus, take the year-over-year decline with a grain of salt. The October sales rate was slightly below consensus expectations. The spike a year ago due to the tax credit, along with the secondary spike when the credit actually did expire for real in June, can be seen in the first graph (from http://www.calculatedriskblog.com/).



Sales of single-family homes rose by 6.7% on the month to a rate of 2.89 million, and are off 27.3% year over year. The median price of a single-family home nationwide edged up 0.4% from a year ago to $171,300. Condo and co-op sales fell 1.9% on the month, and 32.2% year over year. The median condo price slumped 5.5% from a year ago to $165,300.

Regionally, sales were up in all four Census regions for the month. The West fared the best by a wide margin, with sales up 11.7%. The Midwest followed with a 6.4% increase. Sales in the South were up 2.9% and the Northeast saw a 2.7% increase.

Median prices fell in two of the regions, with drops in the South, down 2.6%, and the Midwest, off 1.1%. In contrast, the Northeast prices soared 9.2% from a year ago, while out West prices edged up 0.4%.

Used vs. New Home Sales

The level of activity in used home sales really is not that important in isolation. It is just the transfer of an existing asset, and does not add a lot to economic growth (the one exception to that is realtor's commissions). Indirectly, it can help as people will often remodel and redecorate a “new for them” house. That can stimulate some sales for paint companies like Sherwin Williams (SHW) and perhaps it is good for furniture firms like La-Z-Boy (LZB), but it pales compared to the economic activity generated by a new home sale.

New homes not only need new paint on the walls, but they need the walls. That means lots of business for wallboard firms like USG (USG), timber firms like Weyerhaeuser (WY) and roofing and insulation firms like the Johns Manville division of Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.B). It also means that those firms have to hire more workers, so the employment effect of new home sales goes well beyond the roofers and carpenters actually on the jobsite.

Where used home sales are important is in relation to the inventory of houses for sale. That will influence the future direction of housing prices. Used home prices are extremely important. As used home prices fall, more and more people find themselves underwater on their mortgages.

As long as a homeowner has positive equity in their house, the foreclosure rate should be zero. After all, it is better to simply sell the house and get something for it, rather than simply let the bank take it and get nothing for it. The more people under water, and the deeper they are, the higher foreclosures and strategic defaults are going to be.

A strategic default is when someone has the cashflow available to continue to make his mortgage payment, but simply decides not to, since paying is a just plain stupid thing to do from a financial perspective. If you have a house that could only sell for $150,000 in the current environment, and you owe $200,000 on the mortgage, in effect you have the option of “selling” the house to the bank for $200,000 simply by stopping writing the checks.

Of course, that would be a hit to your credit rating, but $50,000 is probably worth a bit of a tarnish on your Fico score. If the difference is only $5000, then the hit to your credit score makes less sense, and there are lots of non-economic factors (a house is, after all, a home, not just an investment) that come into play.

Inventories and Housing Prices

In November, inventories fell by 4.0% to 3.71 million, but remain well above the year-ago level. That puts the months of supply at 9.5 months, down from 10.5 months in September. While moving slightly in the right direction, it is still a simply awful number. As you can see for the second graph (also from http://www.calculatedriskblog.com/) it is almost as bad now as it was during most of 2008 when home prices were in a freefall.

Fortunately, relative to incomes and rents, home prices are not as absurdly overvalued as they were then, so the magnitude of the coming price declines is likely to be a lot less over the next year than the 30% plunge in 2008 and early 2009. I suspect they will fall by between 5 and 10% from here. Still, that could do a lot of damage, since the equity cushions are a lot smaller now than they were in 2007 or early 2008.

Currently, 23% of all homes with mortgages are underwater, and another 5% have less than 5% positive equity. If housing prices fall more than 5%, then all of them will also be underwater, and lots of homes that are only slightly underwater (where non-financial considerations tend to dominate) will become deeply underwater.



Foreclosures have slowed recently, but that is only because of the "fraudclosure" scandal, where the banks have proved to be exceptionally incompetent in handling the paperwork related to securitized mortgages. Basically, they can't really prove that they hold the mortgage, and thus don't have the right to foreclose.

It remains to be seen just how big a problem that will prove to be. If could just be a technical glitch that will gum up the works for a few months, or it could be a HUGE problem that once again undermines the solvency of the entire banking system. It is a very good reason to avoid bank stocks, especially those like Bank of America (BAC) and Wells Fargo (WFC), where mortgages make up a big part of their business.

With falling home prices, it is likely that the pace of foreclosures will pick up again. Most of those that are being foreclosed on have indeed fallen far behind in their mortgage payments (in that sense, where the foreclosures are legitimate), even if the paperwork is a mess. The combination of underwater homes and reduced cashflow from one or both of the breadwinners in a family being out of work is a toxic mixture for the health of not just the housing market, but the economy as a whole.

Why Build New Homes?

The huge glut of existing homes on the market, and the shadow inventory of homes that are likely to be foreclosed upon and thus come to market in the near future, means that we really have very little need to build new homes. Thus residential investment -- the historical prime locomotive in pulling the economy out of recessions -- will stay derailed.

The jobs not created by a rebound in housing construction will mean that household formation will stay depressed, thus further depressing the demand for housing. To put that in more concrete terms, young adults will not be able to get a job and form a family; instead, they will continue living in Mom and Dad's basement, which does nothing to help soak up the existing housing inventory. A nasty "chicken and the egg" situation.
 
BANK OF AMER CP (BAC): Free Stock Analysis Report
 
LA-Z-BOY INC (LZB): Free Stock Analysis Report
 
USG CORP (USG): Free Stock Analysis Report
 
WELLS FARGO-NEW (WFC): Free Stock Analysis Report
 
Zacks Investment Research
Market News and Data brought to you by Benzinga APIs
Comments
Loading...
Posted In: Building ProductsConsumer DiscretionaryDiversified BanksFinancialsHome FurnishingsIndustrialsOther Diversified Financial Services
Benzinga simplifies the market for smarter investing

Trade confidently with insights and alerts from analyst ratings, free reports and breaking news that affects the stocks you care about.

Join Now: Free!