by Calculated Risk on 11/03/2009 10:23:00 AM
Tuesday, November 03, 2009
Homeownership can be a Nightmare
From Bloomberg: Real Estate Price Plunge Makes U.S. Homeownership Perilous Path
Kajal and Vishal Dharod paid $559,000 in 2006 for a new four-bedroom house built in Rancho Cucamonga, California. Today, it’s worth about $360,000.I know people who lost money in the early '80s housing bust in California, and they refused to buy again for many years. The same thing will happen this time.
“We don’t know how we can come back from a loss like that,” said Kajal Dharod, 29, a first-time homeowner with a $4,200-a-month mortgage. “Buying the house was a mistake.”
American homeownership, once considered a path to wealth, is now leading to disillusionment.
Of course many homeowners are still stuck in their upside down homes, see: More walk away from homes, mortgages (ht Keith, Tim)
"It's increasingly a more important factor driving the foreclosure crisis," says Mark Zandi, of Moody's Economy.com. "As we move forward, the job market will stabilize, and the big thing will be strategic defaults. People are going to determine it doesn't make financial sense to hold on to their homes. That's going to be a significant problem. Strategic defaults mean foreclosures could be high for a long time."Enticing people to buy before they are ready leads to a nightmare, not a dream.
Another $51 Billion for RBS and Lloyds
by Calculated Risk on 11/03/2009 08:38:00 AM
From Bloomberg: RBS, Lloyds Get $51 Billion in Second Bank Bailout
The Treasury will inject 25.5 billion pounds of capital into RBS, for a total of 45.5 billion pounds, making it the costliest bailout of any bank worldwide. The government will fund about a quarter of Lloyds’s 21 billion-pound fundraising.And from The Times: Banks defer bonuses in return for extra £40 billion
In return for receiving billions of pounds more of taxpayers' money, the Treasury said, both banks will not pay cash bonuses for 2009 to any staff earning more than £39,000 a year while the board of each lender will defer bonuses due for this year until 2012.
Stephen Hester, the chief executive of RBS, who took over the role from his disgraced predecessor, Sir Fred Goodwin, said today: “That does mean we will be making extensive use of deferred payments and payments in shares."
Monday, November 02, 2009
Residential Investment Components in Q3
by Calculated Risk on 11/02/2009 09:40:00 PM
More from the Q3 GDP underlying detail tables ...
Note: Residential investment (RI), according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA), includes new single family structures, multifamily structures, home improvement, broker's commissions, and a few minor categories.
Back in Q4 2008 - for the first time ever - investment in home improvements exceeded investment in new single family structures. This has continued through Q3 2009.
Click on graph for larger image in new window.
This graph shows the various components of RI as a percent of GDP for the last 50 years. The most important components are investment in single family structures followed by home improvement.
Investment in home improvement was at a $154.7 billion Seasonally Adjusted Annual Rate (SAAR) in Q3, significantly above the level of investment in single family structures of $105.2 billion (SAAR).
Home improvement spending, as a percent of GDP, is close to the long term average. And Brokers' commissions are slightly above average (2009 was a solid year for agents).
Of course investment in single family structures is near the record low, and far below the normal level. Also far below normal is investment in multifamily structures. These two categories will not increase significantly until the number of excess housing units is reduced (I'll have more on the number of excess housing in the next few days).
Official: Obama Considering Next Stimulus Package
by Calculated Risk on 11/02/2009 06:33:00 PM
Update: from Bloomberg: Locke Was ‘Imprecise’ in Comments on Second Stimulus
Kevin Griffis, a Commerce Department spokesman, said in a telephone interview after Locke spoke that the secretary was referring to “all the different job-creating measures being considered” by lawmakers rather than a single stimulus measure.Earlier post: From Bloomberg: Obama’s Advisers Are Considering Second Stimulus, Locke Says
President Barack Obama’s advisers are “seriously” considering proposing a second stimulus measure to boost the economy, Commerce Secretary Gary Locke said in an interview.Atrios notes: "Had a pet theory that they'd wait until unemployment rounded that magic 10% mark."
Locke said another stimulus would be “very targeted and specific and we need to be mindful of the deficit as well.”
We could see 10% on Friday. The unemployment rate was 9.83% in September (before rounding); an increase of 0.17% from August.
Although there probably were fewer job losses in October than in September (BLS reported 263,000 jobs lost), if a few more people were participating in the work force - perhaps looking for one of the scarce holiday retail jobs - the unemployment rate could easily hit 10% for October. If not in October, then probably in November.
Q3: Office, Mall and Lodging Investment
by Calculated Risk on 11/02/2009 04:09:00 PM
Here is a graph of office, mall and lodging investment through Q3 2009 based on the underlying detail data released by the BEA ...
Click on graph for larger image in new window.
This graph shows investment in offices, lodging and malls as a percent of GDP.
The recent boom in lodging investment has been stunning. Lodging investment peaked at 0.32% of GDP in Q2 2008 and has started to decline (0.21% in Q3 2009).
I expect lodging investment to continue to decline through at least 2010, to perhaps one-third of the peak (investment as percent of GDP).
Investment in multimerchandise shopping structures (malls) peaked in 2007 and has fallen by 40% (note that investment includes remodels, so this will not fall to zero). As projects are completed, mall investment will decline through most of next year. REIS recently reported the "third-quarter vacancy rate at U.S. strip malls, which include local shopping and big-box centers, rose 0.3 percentage points from the second quarter to 10.3 percent, the highest since 1992".
Office investment as a percent of GDP peaked at 0.46% in Q3 2008 and has declined sharply. Reis is reporting the vacancy rate rose to 16.5% in Q3 from 15.9% in Q2. The peak following the previous recession was 17%. With the office vacancy rate rising, office investment will also probably decline through 2010.
Notice that investment in all three categories typically falls for a year or two after the end of a recession, and then usually slowly recovers. Also office investment is usually the most overbuilt in a boom, but this time the office market struggled for a few years after the stock market bubble burst and there was comparatively more investment in malls and hotels.
As projects are completed there will be little new investment in these categories probably at least through 2010. This will be a steady drag on GDP (nothing like the decline in residential investment though), and a steady drag on construction employment.


