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Is the Big Money calling-it-quits?


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2013 Aug 31, 11:58pm   1,144 views  4 comments

by mtw   ➕follow (1)   💰tip   ignore  

According to a report by Goldman Sachs, approximately 57 percent of the homes that were purchased in the first quarter of 2013 were all-cash deals. In 2005, the peak of the bubble, all cash buyers represented a mere 19 percent of all transactions. The amount of investor capital pouring into housing is unprecedented. Moneybags speculators and Private Equity firms have been loading up on real estate like it's going out of style, and for good reason; according to this week's Case Shiller report, housing prices soared more than 12 percent in the last year alone which means that the return on investment rivals the red-hot stock market. Of course, there is a downside to the rising prices phenom as Yale professor Robert Shiller pointed out on Tuesday in an interview on CNBC. Shiller said:

(Housing today) "is a speculative market that is driven by irrational exuberance that can suddenly change.... It's risky. ...The momentum that we have seen historically may be weakening, because there's so many more professionals in the market. It's obvious to me what these hedge fund people are thinking. They're thinking, the market has real momentum and it's going up, so I can buy something and flip it a year later. (But) This idea of a lot of speculators in the market is not healthy." (Link-- http://video.cnbc.com/gallery/?play=1&video=3000194184

Analyst Diana Olick summed it up more succinctly on her Realty Check blog on Wednesday. She said:

"Housing has morphed from a form of shelter to one of the most popular tradable assets, thanks to a huge influx of institutional investors in a mammoth, albeit decreasing, supply of distressed properties. That is why it should come as no surprise the housing market is now nearly as volatile as the stock market." (Realty Check)

Okay, so the flippers and speculators are back and there's a little froth in the market, but does it really matter? After all, no one's complaining, right?

Right. Not yet, at least. But that's just because the hot money is still pouring in and pushing up prices. Once the speculators realize that they're not going to make the killing they thought, then the money's going to dry up, most of the equity gains of the last year will be wiped out, and there'll be a stampede for the exits. And judging by the weakness in mortgage applications --which according Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) have dropped 16 percent since early May--and the sharp decline in new home sales--which according to the Commerce Department plunged 13.4 percent in July--that day may have already arrived. The drop in mortgage applications suggests that demand for single family construction was already weakening when the Fed announced its plan to scale back its asset purchases. The announcement just made matters worse by pushing mortgage rates higher and putting the kibosh on future sales. Here's Olick again:

"Investors made up just 16 percent of home buyers nationally in July, according to the National Association of Realtors, compared with 22 percent in February ..... During the worst of the foreclosure crisis, in some of the hardest hit markets, investors had made up more than half of all buyers.....

Large funds like Colony Capital, Blackstone and Waypoint bought thousands of properties, and drove prices higher, faster than most expected. Now they are focusing on filling those houses with renters." (Diana Olick, Realty Check)

There's no "two ways" about it; if the investor share shrinks, prices will either flatline or tumble. But, where's the proof that investors are throwing in the towel, after all, didn't existing home sales just beat all analysts estimates?

Yep, they sure did. Sales climbed 6.5%, which was leaps and bounds over analysts predictions. But here's the problem; existing sales data is based on closings in May or early June, before the rate increases took effect, so they don't tell you what is going on in real-time. The truth is, we won't know the extent of the (rate) damage until late September. Some analysts figure that September's existing home sales are going be a massacre, but no one knows for sure. Even so, Wall Street is worried, very worried. Here's a blurb from G-Sax in Capital Report:

“The Fed probably shares our concern about the recent numbers, strengthening the argument for continued support for the [mortgage-backed security] market,” even if it begins cutting back on asset purchases next month, Goldman analysts wrote." (Goldman Sachs says housing has hit ‘a pothole’", Capital Report)

In other words, Goldman thinks housing sales are headed for a cliff and they want Bernanke to keep buying the same amount of MBS as he is presently. Olick thinks there's trouble ahead too and says so in this video piece that was released on Wednesday on CNBC.

Diane Olick: "I just got off the phone with Redfin's Greg Kelman and he said he's seeing a huge slowdown in existing home buyers now and says armchair investors who are using credit are getting out." ("Housing takes a bearish turn", Diana Olick, Realty Check, CNBC video)

Investors are getting out?

Yer darn tootin' they are. Check out this report from Reuters titled "Higher prices sap foreign interest in U.S. real estate":

"Foreign investors, who rapaciously scooped up U.S. real estate during the 2007-2009 recession, are backing away from the same markets they so eagerly jumped into a few years ago.

Real estate brokers say demand from international investors has flagged in locations that have been most attractive to overseas buyers – markets such as San Francisco, Phoenix, Las Vegas and Miami....

Calamitous declines in many of the nation’s housing markets during the economic crisis had attracted droves of international investors seeking to cash in on a weak U.S. dollar and rock-bottom property prices. Many were attracted to Sun Belt markets that had been battered by the crisis. The opposite trend is now gathering steam....

....real estate is no longer the bargain it once was for foreigners. That is discouraging new sales, while many foreigners who already own property – especially those who bought strictly as investment – are turning into sellers." ("Analysis: Higher prices sap foreign interest in U.S. real estate", Reuters)

There are three things going on here:

1--The banks have reduced the availability of distressed property in order to keep prices artificially high.
2--Property management, that is, transforming cheap, distressed property into rental units, is not as lucrative as many investors thought it would be.
3---Rates are nearly back to 2011 levels (5%) when the demand for housing was near zilch.

Foreign investors and PE firms with boatloads of cash have been driving the market. Now that's changing. Take a look at this from Bloomberg:

"American Homes 4 Rent (AMH) yesterday fired a group of workers, with a focus on acquisition and construction staff, after the housing landlord reported a fiscal second-quarter loss.....

The company, owner of almost 20,000 single-family homes, has cut about 15 percent of its workforce this year, including an earlier round of terminations before its initial public offering last month.... The Malibu, California-based company, which raised $705.9 million in the IPO, had a net loss of $14 million, or 15 cents a share, on revenue of $18.1 million in the quarter ended June 30, according to a statement this week.

Single-family landlords have struggled to turn a profit while acquiring homes faster than they can fill them with tenants....

American Homes 4 Rent owned 19,825 properties for an investment of $3.4 billion as of July 31, according to its earnings statement. About 56 percent of the company’s homes were leased as of June 30." ("American Homes 4 Rent Said to Fire Employees After Loss", Bloomberg)

Property management just isn't the golden goose these guys thought it would be, so they're either trimming their sails or packing it in altogether. This trend will undoubtedly gain pace in the months ahead, especially now that the Fed's rate stimulus has ended and the 30-year fixed is edging towards 5 percent, the red zone.

In any event, the slowdown in housing is here, it just hasn't shown up in the data yet. I expect the Fed to surprise everyone with an announcement that it plans to INCREASE its monthly purchases of Mortgage-Backed Securities (MBS), even while it "tapers" its purchases of US Treasuries. (UST)

Bernanke has roughly 4 weeks to avoid a full-blown train-wreck in housing sales. If he doesn't push down mortgage rates fast, he's going to have a bloodbath on his hands, and that's probably not the way he wants to be remembered.

Mike Whitney

#housing

Comments 1 - 4 of 4        Search these comments

1   mtw   2013 Sep 1, 12:03am  

Worth a look:

Here's an interview with Diana Olick on what's happening in housing:

http://video.cnbc.com/gallery/?play=1&video=3000193981
Housing takes a bearish turn, Diana Olick, Realty Check, CNBC

2   HEY YOU   2013 Sep 1, 1:43am  

"irrational exuberance" has gotten old. The new phrase is "ignorant excitement".

What happens when all investors decide to get out while the gettin's good & they realize that real estate can be a burdening asset which can't be dumped quickly like the paper of gold,silver,stocks,etc.?If there aren't bulk buyers, then they may have to deal with individual buyers who may want to visually inspect the house,make offer,negotiate,perform due diligence & close in the near future. It's a little different than calling the stock broker & saying "Sell". In the future buyers may have investors by the cojones,I hope.

3   mtw   2013 Sep 1, 2:54am  

There's an interesting story to irrational exuberance.
Greenspan ripped it off from Shiller and never gave him credit. But Shiller (basically) ripped off the concept from JM Keynes "animal spirits", which is the same thing although a less pejorative term.

Oh well, that's my boring contribution for the day.
I'll shut up now.

4   HydroCabron   2013 Sep 1, 3:45am  

There are three things going on here:

1--The banks have reduced the availability of distressed property in order to keep prices artificially high.
2--Property management, that is, transforming cheap, distressed property into rental units, is not as lucrative as many investors thought it would be.
3---Rates are nearly back to 2011 levels (5%) when the demand for housing was near zilch.

Nit-picking.

Higher wages and a booming economy are driving higher rents and sales prices. People understand the high inherent value in a lovely home. If these fancy coastal-elite "investors" don't understand the new paradigm, then do they really understand the difference between real estate and other assets?

Foreign investors and PE firms with boatloads of cash have been driving the market. Now that's changing. Take a look at this from Bloomberg:

"American Homes 4 Rent (AMH) yesterday fired a group of workers, with a focus on acquisition and construction staff, after the housing landlord reported a fiscal second-quarter loss.....

Sounds like this will free up more cash for further acquisitions, driving prices higher! Good news for SFH prices!

The company, owner of almost 20,000 single-family homes, has cut about 15 percent of its workforce this year, including an earlier round of terminations before its initial public offering last month.... The Malibu, California-based company, which raised $705.9 million in the IPO, had a net loss of $14 million, or 15 cents a share, on revenue of $18.1 million in the quarter ended June 30, according to a statement this week.

Nothingburger. Every enterprise has a few setbacks.

Single-family landlords have struggled to turn a profit while acquiring homes faster than they can fill them with tenants....

American Homes 4 Rent owned 19,825 properties for an investment of $3.4 billion as of July 31, according to its earnings statement. About 56 percent of the company’s homes were leased as of June 30." ("American Homes 4 Rent Said to Fire Employees After Loss", Bloomberg)

That's 56% of their assets that are generating rivers of cash flow! Only 44% are vacant - damn good productivity ratio, if you ask me. After all, don't most landlords get by with an average of 3 weeks per year of vacant time? That sounds pretty close to 44% to me.

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