There’s always something to howl about.

Can We Stop Falling House Values? An Op Ed piece by the NAHB

This is excerpts from an op ed piece written by Steve Hodgkins.   I’ll throw some comments in to explain/clarify what he’s saying and why I don’t agree with a large portion of it.

The decline in single-family home values is the predominate reason for the current economic collapse……

Tom here – which came first, the chicken or the egg?   Did the subprime mortgage lending boom send housing prices way too high because credit was too easy?   Or did housing prices fall because those loans went bad?   Or both?

Falling values have decimated the single-family construction industry, which normally supplies roughly 16% of the gross national product of the United States……

At the height of the housing boom, developers and home builders were buying land, developing lots and building houses based on an economy fueled by subprime mortgages.

They neither asked for nor were even aware of this giant social experiment conceived by our political leaders and the heads of mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

Tom here – so they didn’t ask for increased lending?   They weren’t even aware of the fact that lending was significantly more lenient than it was before?   They are saying that they never lobbied for easier lending?   I’m sorry I’m not buying it….

As entrepreneurs and job creators, home builders were simply responding to perceived market conditions. Likewise, their banks and financial partners were making decisions based on historical market data.

Tom here – “making decisions based on historical market data?”   So he’s saying that the sudden relaxation of mortgage guidelines was based on historical data?   How does he figure that?   I’m absolutely positive that I’m not the only mortgage lender who said, “Wow, I can’t believe that Fannie and Freddie will buy this loan…..”

After the subprime loans were pulled out of the marketplace, builders were left with large inventories of land, lots and houses and far fewer buyers who were able to qualify…..

Tom here – I’m not sure that it’s quite an accurate description of the market dynamics.   Did the subprime mortgages get pulled or did buyers stop buying a new home because prices have gotten too high and the increase in prices caused payment problems which then sent subprime into a downward spiral…..?

……..Bank bailouts are simply Band-Aids and will only delay the inevitable unless the decline of home values is curtailed.

Loss of value has also hugely affected the confidence of the American consumer, whose home equity typically represents the family’s largest financial asset. The deterioration of home values and resulting loss of net worth have made the consumer reluctant to commit to large purchases…..

Tom here – it’s not just a loss of net worth, it’s the closing of the Home ATM that has hurt the economy.   Consumers were living well beyond their means and were doing so by means of borrowing against their homes.   That era is over.

……The question, then, is how do we halt the decline in home values?

Tom here – is that the question or is the question – Can we halt the decline in home values?   Or “Should we stop the decline in home values?  Or “Does attempting to halt the decline in home values merely make things drawn out over a longer time frame?

……..Although it is commonly held that location, location, location is what determines value, there is nothing more important than financing, financing, financing.

Tom here – nothing is more important than financing?   I don’t think so.   I’d argue that financing is an important part of the transaction, but that it’s not the only thing.   Many people feel that car dealers have a bad reputation because they want to break everything down to ‘How much is my payment?’   Housing is different than that.

More than 98% of all real estate transactions involve some type of financing, and it is the loss of long-term financing that has caused the recent downturn in values.

Tom here – reading that last part would make you think that NO ONE can get a residential mortgage.   That’s not true!   I just wrote an e-book called Straight Talk About Mortgages – How to Survive and Thrive in Today’s New Mortgage World which was written to help people realize that they can get a mortgage in today’s market.

……This is the first economic downturn in the last 30 years in which long-term interest rates have not dropped significantly. In the usual cycle, sales slow and then rates drop, encouraging buyers back into the market to purchase homes with more affordable monthly payments. In this downturn, Treasury yields have fallen significantly while mortgage rates have not followed suit…….

Tom here – that’s because this is a different economic downturn than last time.   There’s a retrenchment of consumer sentiment going on and it’s going to take different things to get through and out of this to the other side than strictly lower rates.   That’s why I wrote that Lower Rates aren’t the Silver Bullet.

……There is no doubt that lower mortgage rates would bring buyers back into the market.

Tom here – I’ve asked a lot of people this question:  “On an average priced house, a 1% drop in mortgage rates would drop payments approximately $100 per month.  Would that be enough to get people to decide to buy a house?”     The overwhelming answer was, “Maybe for a few, but not enough to make a difference in the housing market.”

……..The problem is: how do we get mortgage rates down and how do we get potential buyers qualified?

Tom here – that’s not the question we should be asking.   The question we should be asking is, “What can the government do to make people feel more safe and secure in their financial position so that they feel comfortable buying a new home?”

The following is a list of recommendations to get buyers into houses that will also help those people who are saddled with punitive adjustable-rate mortgages stay in their homes:…….
In conclusion, the erosion in the value of single-family homes must be stopped for the economy to begin to recover. Decisive and dramatic action must be taken for this to happen. The above ideas are realistic and will work if they are implemented.

Steve Hodgkins is the president-elect of the Memphis Area Home Builders Association and the founder of Oaktree Homes, LLC.

Okay, a couple of additional thoughts:

  1. The housing market and the mortgage mess is the spark that ignited the credit bomb that blew up/is blowing up on us.
  2. The issue now has become much bigger than that.   Consumers are feeling way over extended.
  3. The markets (housing, banking, stock, etc.) won’t turn around until consumers start feeling better about their financial position.
  4. Any government stimulus packages that aren’t focused on resolving the consumer’s financial struggles are misguided and won’t work.

What do you think?

Tom Vanderwell