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People from all over the world want ti live in places like the US, Germany, Canada. Soon, the avg joe in the US will have no chance to own a house ever.
Even with the huge run-up in prices during Covid, the annual production of units was similar to the 1960s, when the population was much smaller. This is not only in housing, but across the differing sectors of the economy as a whole.
Houses are the greatest assets to own because population increases but no additional land is being produced.
Healthcare, education, housing and vehicles rising faster than inflation and incomes. Is that correct?
Income to prices is becoming less relevant as an indicator because of the financialization of housing. Rich people and corporations are just buying up more homes.
I referenced an article on ZeroHedge about this and a couple of Patnet posters made disparaging remarks about it being overly pessimistic.
if anything a long slow decline until wages catch up with valuations.
I have been seeing locally a proliferation of new apartment buildings going up, which may help to increase supply enough to at least slow housing inflation.
I think we need to look to the late 70s and early 80s (the last time rates rose rapidly) rather than the 2000 housing bubble and subsequent collapse
SFH ownership is moving into corporate hands.
By Michael Shedlock
Mish Talk
August 29, 2023
Some deny there is a housing bubble. I believe the bubble is obvious.
Case-Shiller home price index and Real Disposable Income via St. Louis Fed, chart by Mish.
Chart Notes
Case-Shiller is a measure of repeat sales of the same house. This is a far better measure than average or median prices that widely vary over time by home size and amenities.
Disposable means after taxes
Real means inflation adjusted using the BEA’s Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) inflation index, not the BLS Consumer Price Index (CPI).
Both indexes are set to 2000=100.
Case-Shiller is through May (reflective of March) while Real DPI is through June. There is a minor bit of skew that I did not factor in.
For at least 12 years, home prices followed extremely closely to real disposable personal income. In 2012 the indexes touched again at 133-134.
The BEA calculates REAL based on PCE. Adjusting for inflation bythe CPI would make the current bubble look bigger and I believe more accurate.
The important point is the massive divergence between the measures noting that the bubble is a bit understated.
Percentage Difference Between Home Prices and Real DPI
2006: (185-120)/120 * 100 = 54.17 Percent
2023: (305-169)/169 * 100) = 80.47 percent
On a real DPI basis, home prices are roughly 80 percent above where they should be.
Some justify these home prices on the basis of mortgage rates and affordability. They are wrong.
The difference between home prices and income is really a measure of the Fed’s propensity to blow financial bubbles by keeping rates too low too long.
I will address alleged affordability in a following post.
The Fed Commits to a 2 Percent Inflation Target, Carefully
Meanwhile, please note The Fed Commits to a 2 Percent Inflation Target, Carefully
Powell’s Warnings
Here is the key thing Powell said today: “As is often the case, we are navigating by the stars under cloudy skies.”
And to that I would add, using tools like inflation expectations proven to be totally worthless.
For discussion of inflation expectations and Biden’s energy goals guaranteed to be inflationary, please see Should the Fed Declare Defeat and Move On?
The Fed wants inflation at 2 percent but is clueless how to measure it.
This creates bubbles of increasing amplitude over time. And the middle class shrinks as a result.
This post originated on MishTalk.Com