by Calculated Risk on 11/06/2014 02:55:00 PM
Thursday, November 06, 2014
NAHB: Builder Confidence improves for the 55+ Housing Market in Q3
This is a quarterly index from the the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) and is similar to the overall housing market index (HMI). The NAHB started this index in Q4 2008 (during the housing bust), so the readings were initially very low. Note that this index is Not Seasonally Adjusted (NSA)
From the NAHB: Builders Gain Confidence in the 55+ Housing Market
Builder confidence in the 55+ housing market was up again in the third quarter, according to the latest release of NAHB’s 55+ Housing Market Index (55+HMI). The 55+ HMI release contains separate indices for single-family homes and multifamily condominiums. Each is a weighted average of three components: present sales, expected sales, and traffic. The numbers are not seasonally adjusted, so they should only be compared year over year. On that basis, both were up in the third quarter.
The single-family 55+ HMI jumped nine points from the third quarter of 2013, to 59—the highest third-quarter reading since the inception of the index in 2008 and the 12th consecutive quarter of year over year improvements. All three components posted year-over-year increases: present sales jumped 13 points to 65, expected sales for the next six months climbed 10 points to 63 and traffic of prospective buyers rose three points to 46.
emphasis added
This graph shows the NAHB 55+ HMI through Q3 2014. The index increased in Q3 to 59 from 56 in Q2, and up from 50 in Q3 2013. This indicates that more builders view conditions as good than as poor.
There are two key drivers in addition to the improved economy: 1) there is a large cohort moving into the 55+ group, and 2) the homeownership rate typically increases for people in the 55 to 70 year old age group. So demographics should be favorable for the 55+ market.
Las Vegas Real Estate in October: YoY Non-contingent Inventory up 26%, Distressed Sales and Cash Buying down YoY
by Calculated Risk on 11/06/2014 10:57:00 AM
This is a key distressed market to follow since Las Vegas has seen the largest price decline of any of the Case-Shiller composite 20 cities.
The Greater Las Vegas Association of Realtors reported GLVAR reports dip in local home prices
According to GLVAR, the total number of existing local homes, condominiums and townhomes sold in October was 2,861, down from 2,982 in September and down from 3,192 one year ago. At the current pace, [GLVAR President Heidi] Kasama said Southern Nevada has about a four-month supply of available properties. REALTORS® consider a six-month supply to be a balanced market.There are several key trends that we've been following:
...
GLVAR said 35.1 percent all local properties sold in October were purchased with cash. That’s up from 34.3 percent in September, but still well short of the February 2013 peak of 59.5 percent, suggesting that fewer investors have been buying homes in Southern Nevada.
...
For nearly two years, GLVAR has reported fewer distressed sales and more traditional home sales, where lenders are not controlling the transaction. That trend generally continued in October, when GLVAR reported that 10.6 percent of all local sales were short sales – which occur when lenders allow borrowers to sell a home for less than what they owe on the mortgage. That’s up from 10.4 percent in September. Another 8.9 percent of all October sales were bank-owned properties, up from 8.8 percent in September and matching the percentage in August.
...
The total number of single-family homes listed for sale on GLVAR’s Multiple Listing Service in October was 14,430, up 4.1 percent from 13,857 in September, but down 3.9 percent from one year ago. ...
By the end of October, GLVAR reported 8,880 single-family homes listed without any sort of offer. That’s up 8.3 percent from 8,196 such homes listed in September and up 25.6 percent from one year ago. For condos and townhomes, the 2,548 properties listed without offers in October represented a 5.5 percent increase from 2,415 such properties listed in September and a 13.4 percent increase from one year ago.
emphasis added
1) Overall sales were down 10.4% year-over-year.
2) However conventional (equity, not distressed) sales were only down slightly year-over-year. In October 2013, only 73.0% of all sales were conventional equity. This year, in October 2014, 80.5% were equity sales.
3) The percent of cash sales has declined year-over-year from 44.9% in October 2013 to 35.1% in October 2014. (investor buying appears to be declining).
4) Non-contingent inventory is up 25.6% year-over-year. The table below shows the year-over-year change for non-contingent inventory in Las Vegas. Inventory declined sharply through early 2013, and then inventory started increasing sharply year-over-year. It appears the inventory build is slowing (an important change in many areas).
| Las Vegas: Year-over-year Change in Non-contingent Inventory | |
|---|---|
| Month | YoY |
| Jan-13 | -58.3% |
| Feb-13 | -53.4% |
| Mar-13 | -42.1% |
| Apr-13 | -24.1% |
| May-13 | -13.2% |
| Jun-13 | 3.7% |
| Jul-13 | 9.0% |
| Aug-13 | 41.1% |
| Sep-13 | 60.5% |
| Oct-13 | 73.4% |
| Nov-13 | 77.4% |
| Dec-13 | 78.6% |
| Jan-14 | 96.2% |
| Feb-14 | 107.3% |
| Mar-14 | 127.9% |
| Apr-14 | 103.1% |
| May-14 | 100.6% |
| Jun-14 | 86.2% |
| Jul-14 | 55.2% |
| Aug-14 | 38.8% |
| Sep-14 | 29.5% |
| Oct-14 | 25.6% |
Trulia: Asking House Prices up 6.4% year-over-year in October
by Calculated Risk on 11/06/2014 08:50:00 AM
From Trulia chief economist Jed Kolko: What Home Price Slowdown? Some Markets Buck the Trend
Nationally, the month-over-month increase in asking home prices rose to 1.0% in October. Year-over-year, asking prices rose 6.4%, down from the 10.6% year-over-year increase in October 2013. Asking prices rose year-over-year in 91 of the 100 largest U.S. metros.Note: These asking prices are SA (Seasonally Adjusted) - and adjusted for the mix of homes - and although year-over-year price increases have slowed, the month-to-month increase suggests further house price increases over the next few months on a seasonally adjusted basis.
Nationally, year-over-year price gains have slowed from a year ago. In some markets, this price slowdown has been precipitous. In the most extreme case, Las Vegas prices rose 10.1% in October 2014 versus 31.9% in October 2013, a drop of 21.8 percentage points. Price gains have slowed by almost 20 percentage points in both Northern California (Sacramento, Oakland) and Southern California (Riverside-San Bernardino, San Diego) markets. Among the 10 markets with the largest price slowdowns, only one – Warren-Troy-Farmington Hills, next to Detroit – is outside California or the Southwest.
Nationally, price gains have slowed in 60 of the 100 largest metros, although prices are actually falling year-over-year in only nine metros.
Nationally, rents rose 6.2% year-over-year in October. But in the markets where renters are stretched thinnest, rents are rising even faster. In Miami, Los Angeles, and New York, the median rent on a 2-bedroom unit equals more than half of the average monthly wage, and it’s nearly that much in Oakland and San Francisco. In all five of these least-affordable markets, rents rose 7.8% or more year-over-year.
emphasis added
There is much more in the article.
Weekly Initial Unemployment Claims decreased to 278,000, 4-Week Average lowest since April 2000
by Calculated Risk on 11/06/2014 08:34:00 AM
The DOL reported:
In the week ending November 1, the advance figure for seasonally adjusted initial claims was 278,000, a decrease of 10,000 from the previous week's revised level. The previous week's level was revised up by 1,000 from 287,000 to 288,000. The 4-week moving average was 279,000, a decrease of 2,250 from the previous week's revised average. This is the lowest level for this average since April 29, 2000 when it was 273,000. The previous week's average was revised up by 250 from 281,000 to 281,250.The previous week was revised up to 288,000.
There were no special factors impacting this week's initial claims.
The following graph shows the 4-week moving average of weekly claims since January 1971.
The dashed line on the graph is the current 4-week average. The four-week average of weekly unemployment claims decreased to 279,000.
This was lower than the consensus forecast and suggests few layoffs.
Wednesday, November 05, 2014
Thursday: Unemployment Claims
by Calculated Risk on 11/05/2014 09:47:00 PM
From NDD: A little post-election-day economic balm
If Washington can simply manage to do absolutely nothing to the economy in the next two years, except to agree to pay already incurred debts (a/k/a lift the debt ceiling), then we are in the best position we have been in for nearly a decade for the economy by itself to improve the lot of the working and middle class appreciably.Since Senator McConnell has already ruled out defaulting (Congress will raise the "debt ceiling") and another government shutdown, then doing next to nothing will probably be OK.
Here's why:
• there is nothing in the long leading indicators to suggest that we are going to enter an economic downturn at any point in at least the next 9 months. If interest rates continue to drift lower and housing starts improve as a result, you can extend that forecast into 2016.In short, simply leaving the economy alone for the next 2 years is likely to mean a continued improvement in the jobs picture, and a significant improvement on the wage front. Or, if ever there was a time when laissez faire might be a perfectly decent policy, this point in the cycle is it.
• continuing economic growth means continuing positive monthly jobs reports
• so long as there is positive jobs growth, and initial jobless claims stay at or near their current levels, the unemployment rate is going to continue to decline -- and that's not just the usual rate, but all the other variations on the unemployment rate as well.
• Because the unemployment rate should remain below 6.5% for the foreseeable future, that means that nominal wage growth, which has been improving for the last 18 months, will continue to improve further - i.e., to 2.5% YoY or 3.0% YoY.
• Also, incremental tightness in the labor market is going to mean that better paying jobs become an increasing share of employment - my hypothesis is that this recovery is no different from previous recoveries, where low wage jobs get added first, and higher wage jobs get added later. Like the expansion after the deep 1982 recession, there was so much slack that it took a long time for those higher paying jobs to show up. There is evidence from the last few jobs reports that it is beginning to happen.
• Unless there is a reversal in gas prices, this is going to mean significant real wage growth to the average working family.
Thursday:
• Early: Trulia Price Rent Monitors for October. This is the index from Trulia that uses asking house prices adjusted both for the mix of homes listed for sale and for seasonal factors.
• At 8:30 AM ET, the initial weekly unemployment claims report will be released. The consensus is for claims to decrease to 283 thousand from 287 thousand.


