With home prices rising again this year, some are concerned
that we may be repeating the 2006 housing bubble that caused families so much
pain when it collapsed. Today’s market is quite different than the bubble
market of twelve years ago. There are four key metrics that explain why:
1.
Home Prices
2.
Mortgage Standards
3.
Mortgage Debt
4.
Housing Affordability
1. HOME PRICES
There is no doubt that home prices have reached 2006 levels
in many markets across the country. However, after more than a decade, home
prices should be much higher based on inflation alone.
Frank Nothaft is the Chief Economist for CoreLogic (which
compiles some of the best data on past, current, and future home prices).
Nothaft recently explained:
“Even though CoreLogic’s national home price index got to
the same level it was at the prior peak in April of 2006, once you account for
inflation over the ensuing 11.5 years, values are still about 18% below
where they were.” (emphasis added)
2. MORTGAGE STANDARDS
Some are concerned that banks are once again easing lending
standards to a level similar to the one that helped create the last housing
bubble. However, there is proof that today’s standards are nowhere near as
lenient as they were leading up to the crash.
The Urban Institute’s Housing Finance
Policy Center issues a Housing Credit Availability Index (HCAI).According to
the Urban Institute:
“The HCAI measures the percentage of home purchase loans
that are likely to default—that is, go unpaid for more than 90 days past their
due date. A lower HCAI indicates that lenders are unwilling to tolerate
defaults and are imposing tighter lending standards, making it harder to get a
loan. A higher HCAI indicates that lenders are willing to tolerate defaults and
are taking more risks, making it easier to get a loan.”
The graph below reveals that standards today are much
tighter on a borrower’s credit situation and have all but eliminated the
riskiest loan products.
3. MORTGAGE DEBT
Back in 2006, many homeowners
mistakenly used their homes as ATMs by withdrawing their equity and spending it
with no concern for the ramifications. They overloaded themselves with mortgage
debt that they couldn’t (or wouldn’t) repay when prices crashed. That is not
occurring today.
The best indicator of
mortgage debt is the Federal Reserve Board’s
household Debt Service Ratio for mortgages,
which calculates mortgage debt as a percentage of disposable personal income.
At the height of the bubble
market a decade ago, the ratio stood at 7.21%. That meant over 7% of disposable
personal income was being spent on mortgage payments. Today, the ratio stands at 4.48% – the lowest level in 38 years!
4. HOUSING
AFFORDABILITY
With both house prices and
mortgage rates on the rise, there is concern that many buyers may no longer be
able to afford a home. However, when we look at the Housing Affordability Index released
by the National Association of Realtors,
homes are more affordable now than at any other time since 1985 (except for
when prices crashed after the bubble popped in 2008).
Bottom Line
After using four key housing
metrics to compare today to 2006, we can see that the current market is not
anything like the bubble market.
Contact The McLeod Group Network for all
your Real Estate needs! 971.208.5093 or mcleodgroupoffice@gmail.com.
By: KCM Crew
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