Posts Tagged ‘dot-com’

SPECIAL EDITION: Cirios Trends — A Decade in Flux

Monday, January 4th, 2010

In this SPECIAL EDITION, check out:

The State of the Markets: A Decade in Flux
10 years that were anything but boring..

Home Prices: A Much Needed Breather
After a historic rise, an equally historic fall.

Getting Back on Track: Are We There Yet?
Many believe the bottom in housing has come and gone. Are they right?

Recovery: How Long Did it Take Last Time?
Buying into the abyss proved profitable in the early ‘90s, is this time any different?

Inflation, What is it Good For?
Philosophy aside, inflation is a lot more than just rising prices.

Inflation and Home Prices: Is the Romance Over?
The CPI and property values used to move in lock step, find out what changed.

Home Prices vs. Mortgage Rates: Let’s Dance
Explore the relationship at the heart of the debate over the housing market’s future.

Do High Mortgage Rates Kill Home Prices?
Find out what’s in store of rates rise from historic lows.

All Bubbles Burst, Eventually
All Hail the Fed … as long as nothing goes wrong.

A Tale of Two Markets: Underneath the Data
Examining California two cities that represent divergent trends within the housing market.

What is Value?
A bit of levity goes a long way.

Inflation and Home Prices: Is the Romance Over?

Monday, January 4th, 2010

This post first appeared in the SPECIAL EDITION: Cirios Trends: A Decade in Flux

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A cursory look at the long term trends for inflation and home prices reveal strikingly similar patterns. Until, that is, right around 2003 (see dotted line below).


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In the wake of the short recession caused by the dot-com bust and September 11th terrorist attacks, then-Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan aggressively lowered interest rates to spur economic growth. Leaving rates at historic lows for several years encouraged active borrowing, helping to bring the US economy out of its tailspin.

Greenspan critics now wonder, at what cost?

As homeowners, real estate speculators, investment bankers, mortgage brokers, real estate agents, appraisers and credit rating companies (among others) rushed to grab their piece of property values, the historic relationship between moderate inflation and steadily rising home prices broke down. Home prices leapt, while inflation continued its casual march upward.

Then, around the beginning of 2007 (the “peak” of our 6-month moving average dataset), the relationship flipped inverse (see arrow above). Rising prices as measured by the CPI faced off with tumbling home prices, feeding the feverish macroeconomic debate of inflationists vs. deflationists.

Now, as what feels like the entirety of the financial world awaits the inevitable inflation that “must” come after trillions upon trillions of dollars in economic stimulus, we hope the following few pages shed some light on what we can expect if it turns out the majority (in this case, the inflationists) prove to be correct. Since policy-makers’ key tool to fight inflation is higher interest rates, and higher interest rates translate into more expensive mortgages, future inflation has serious implications for real estate markets around the country.

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A Tale of Two Markets: Underneath the Data

Monday, January 4th, 2010

This post first appeared in the SPECIAL EDITION: Cirios Trends: A Decade in Flux

<< PREVIOUS

Since we just spent the last ten pages laboriously scratching the surface of complex macroeconomic trends with a few over-simplified charts, we will now analyze every single US housing market by looking at sales data in two cities.

As we wrote in April 2009, “The bifurcation of the real estate market continues, as troubles in the high end are picking up the slack while low-end markets grope for a bottom.” This trend has persisted for months, and as foreclosures creep into higher end markets, we believe the trend will persist for the foreseeable future.

Below are sales transactions for the past ten years in East Palo Alto. East Palo Alto, which in 1992 had the dubious distinction of being “murder capital, USA” by tallying the highest murder-per-capita rate in the entire country, has undergone a renaissance of sorts. Sort of.

As Silicon Valley wealth swelled during the dot-com boom, so too did housing prices. One of the last bastions of affordability on the Peninsula, real estate speculators flocked to this rough town for high risk, high reward development. The town experienced a decade of gentrification on steroids, as home prices became completely unhinged with the economic prospects of the area’s residents.

This story was repeated in cities across the country, each with it’s own unique flare. Vegas condos went through the roof. Track homes in Phoenix were flipped monthly by amateur and professional real estate speculators alike. Waterfront homes in the quiet town of Cape Coral, FL approached $1 million apiece.

But now, as prices in these markets have returned to earth, buyers are wading back in, armed with government loans, tax credits and a newfound fear of the stock market. Inventory is being constricted by ongoing foreclosure moratoria and in certain markets, prices have begun to stabilize.

The arrow below points out the steep price declines from 2007-2008 on few sales transactions. The shaded circle shows buyers stepping back in and prices groping for a bottom.


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On the other side of Highway 101, the city of Palo Alto exists in precise contradiction to its neighbor to the east. Quiet streets, large lots and excellent schools make Palo Alto one of the most desirable places to raise a family in the entire country. Home prices, as one would expect, are very, very high.

Palo Alto residents have had decades of prosperity to accumulate wealth, and a few bad months in the stock market or the loss of a job doesn’t necessarily spell financial ruin. Fewer mortgage defaults, less dependence on credit cards and a general affluence meant that the bubble popped here later, and with less vigor. In other words, the “Price Discovery” (ie, a precipitous drop in prices resulting from a void of buyers, only to be stabilized as buyers step back into the market looking for bargains) that has occurred in East Palo Alto is yet to come to well-to-do areas like Palo Alto.

As can be seen from the green shaded oval below, Palo Alto experienced a mini-bubble on the tail end of the dot-com boom. Prices have now fallen to around where they were back in 2004, but only just below the maniacal glory days of Pets.com and WebVan. And, as foreclosures infiltrate these luxury markets, forced sales are becoming more common. This is beginning to drive down prices, as can be seen in the recent dip that picked up steam earlier in the year.

Luxury markets around the country have seen a similar trend in home prices: A later peak and less dramatic fall, but prices that are yet to be supported by opportunistic investors. But all is not bleak in other Palo Altos around the country.

These high-end markets have benefitted from the strong stock market of the past 9 months. If the economy can avoid another tumble and markets can remain resilient as the government gradually withdraws its stimulus, high end markets may find support sooner than many skeptics think.


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