Real
Estate News
People
Are Talking…
By ROBERT
J. SHILLER
June 2, 2005; Page A12
The home price boom in the U.S.
has had a peculiar form since it began in the late 1990s: Home
price increases have been getting stronger and stronger each year,
year after year.
According to the inflation-adjusted
Case-Shiller home price index from Fiserv CSW, Inc., real U.S.
home prices, after falling 0.5% in 1996, rose 2.1% in 1997, 5.4%
in 1998, 5.4% in 1999, 5.8% in 2000, 5.8% in 2001, 8.1% in 2002,
8.5% in 2003, and 11.2% in 2004. Each year over nearly a decade
was as strong as, or stronger than, the year before it. Other bubble
countries, the U.K. and Australia, have not shown this pattern:
Growth rates of home prices have been slowing there for years now.
The upward pattern is a little
less regular but even more striking in some U.S. cities. In Los
Angeles, real home prices, after falling 2.7% in 1996, rose 4.1%
in 1997, 10.3% in 1998, 4.5% in 1999, 7.7% in 2000, 7.9% in 2001,
16.9% in 2002, 19.2% in 2003, and 23.2% in 2004.
It doesn't take a lot of expertise
to see that there is a trend in home price growth rates in the
U.S., and nothing could be more natural than to extrapolate this
trend. Just last month sales of existing homes set another record.
So why not jump into investments in the real-estate market now?
There is nothing clear on the
horizon to break the trend. Of course, the Fed has been raising
rates, but it has been doing that for almost a year now with little
effect. When they raised rates in 1999 and 2000, and when they
cut interest rates drastically in 2001, there was no noticeable
effect on the trend in home prices either.
Are those experts preaching
efficient markets and diversification just hopelessly naïve?
What concrete reason is there not to invest heavily in real estate?
Many of us, in fact, are kicking ourselves for not exploiting this
obvious investment opportunity years ago.
The biggest uncertainty, for
many of us, is just that this pattern of home prices looks like
a mass-psychological phenomenon called a bubble. The trend is creating
the trend, as more and more herdlike investors notice the trend
and pile into the market. If that is what is happening, it can't
go on forever. We worry that if we invest in this market, it will
be just our luck that it will be a sign that we are among the last
investors doing this, and that the market will turn suddenly afterwards.
Some experts are saying that
real-estate markets never change suddenly. Actually, what they
are saying is only a half truth. Real-estate markets tend to be
uneventful from year to year but sometimes do change very fast.
Real home prices in Sydney, Australia, rose 12.8% in 2003 and then
dropped 2.5% in 2004, a pretty sharp bursting of their bubble.
We have seen that sort of thing happen in the U.S., too. Real home
prices in high-tech San Francisco rose 26.5% in 2000 and then fell
5.7% in 2001, when the stock-market tech bubble crashed.
Prices quickly rebounded in
San Francisco after 2001, but we have no assurance that they will
rebound the next time. There is also a lot of historical precedent
for gradually sagging real-estate markets. The first half of the
20th century was a time of generally falling real home prices,
and real home prices fell over a third in the 50 years from 1894
to 1944. Looking forward, as long as home prices are high relative
to construction costs, home builders will have an incentive to
increase supply. Home price increases have been fast outpacing
construction cost increases during this boom.
So, a sharp reversal in the
uptrend in home prices, followed by years of sagging home prices,
is certainly a real possibility.
What makes for sudden sharp
reversals of trend and sudden drops in home prices? There is no
received doctrine among the experts on this point, basically since
there are not many major real-estate bubbles to study, and the
few that we do have to look at have more special events as part
of them than we can possibly sort through. With so many relevant
economic factors, it is too easy for economists to overfit their
models and delude themselves into thinking that economic fundamentals
explain everything, with no need to resort to investor psychology.
But prices in speculative markets
are ultimately determined in people's minds, by what they are willing
to pay. If people change their minds, prices can change instantly
and dramatically. Something has been going on in the minds of Americans
that has been leading to an ever-strengthening housing market starting
in 1997. That something can change.
There is a widespread perception
that something big and exogenous has to happen to break the bubble.
People say: Sure, after the real-estate boom of the 1980s, Los
Angeles home prices fell 41% in real terms between its peak in
late 1989 and its bottom in early 1997, but that was a time when
the defense and aerospace industries were contracting in Southern
California. They say that contraction is the real explanation of
the price drop there.
Special factors may help explain
the most extreme price declines, but talk and high prices are the
main things that end bubbles. The intensity of talk about the high
prices right now is enormous, suggesting an emerging change of
public thinking that may signal the end of the bubble.
A similar volume of talk occurred
in Australia in late 2003, almost exactly when their housing boom
ended. The peak of newspaper articles about the housing bubble
in Australia was in September 2003, when the IMF's September World
Economic Outlook described an Australian housing bubble and when
the Australian Treasury warned of a housing bubble. This was after
the Reserve Bank of Australia had been warning of a housing bubble
for a year.
Such talk from authorities hasn't
happened in the U.S. until now. On May 16, five Federal agencies
including the Federal Reserve issued new guidelines for home equity
lending, where, they said, lending standards "have not kept pace
with the product's rapid growth." On May 20, Federal Reserve Chairman
Alan Greenspan said that we are in "a lot of local bubbles" in
markets for homes. The volume of public talk about the housing
bubble set a new record in May.
Forecasters are naturally wary
of predicting turning points. The upward momentum in home price
growth rates has been so strong that it seems to be a slam dunk
to forecast major home price increases again for the rest of this
year. Maybe that is the right forecast. But, beware.
Mr. Shiller is a professor
of Economics at Yale, a principal at Macro Securities Research,
LLC., and the author of "Irrational Exuberance," (Princeton,
2005; 2nd edition).
From article in Wall Street Journal |