Lately, my inbox has been flooded with emails from subscribers asking how to hedge the value of their homes. This can only mean one thing: the residential real estate market has peaked.
They have a lot to protect. Since prices hit rock bottom in 2011 and foreclosures crested, the national real estate market has risen by 50%.
I could almost tell you the day the market bounced. That’s when a couple of homes in my neighborhood that had been for sale for years suddenly went into escrow.
The hottest markets, like those in Seattle, San Francisco, and Reno, are up by more than 125%, and certain neighborhoods of Oakland, CA have shot up by 400%.
The concerns are confirmed by data that started to roll over in the spring and have been dismal ever since. It is not just one data series that has rolled over, they have all gone bad. One bad data point can be a blip. An onslaught is a new trend. Let me give you a dismal sampling.
*Home Affordability hit a decade low, thanks to rising prices and interest rates and trade war-induced soaring construction costs
*July Housing Starts have been in a tailspin as tariff-induced rocketing costs wipe out the profitability of new homes
*New Home Sales collapsed YOY.
*14% of all June Real Estate Listings saw price cuts, a two-year high
*Chinese Buying of West Coast homes has vaporized over trade war fears
Fortunately, investors have a lot of options for either hedging the value of their own homes or making a bet that the market will fall.
In 2006, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) started trading futures contracts for the Corelogic S&P/Case-Schiller Home Price Index, which covered both U.S. residential and commercial properties.
The Case-Shiller index, originated in the 1980s by Karl Case and Robert Shiller, is widely considered to be the most reliable gauge to measure housing price movements. The data comes out monthly with a three-month lag.
This index is a widely-used and respected barometer of the U.S. housing market and the broader economy and is regularly covered in the Mad Hedge Fund Trader biweekly global strategy webinars.
The composite weight of the CSI index is as follows:
Boston 7.4%
Chicago 8.9%
Denver 3.6%
Las Vegas 1.5%
Los Angeles 21.2%
Miami 5%
New York 27.2%
San Diego 5.5%
San Francisco 11.8%
Washington DC 7.9%
However, these contracts suffer from the limitations suffered by all futures contracts. They can be illiquid, expensive to deal in, and you probably couldn’t get permission from your brokers to trade them anyway.
If you want to be more conservative, you could take out bearish positions on the iShares US Home Construction Index (ITB), a basket of the largest homebuilders (click here for their prospectus). Baskets usually present half the volatility and therefore half the risk of any individual stock.
If real estate is headed for the ashcan of history, there are far bigger problems for your investment portfolio than the value of your home. Real estate represents a major part of the US economy and if it is going into the toilet, you could too.
It is joined by the sickly auto industry. Thanks to the trade wars, farm incomes are now at a decade low. As we lose each major segment of the economy, the risk is looming that the whole thing could go kaput. That, ladies and gentlemen, is called a recession and a bear market.
On the other hand, you could take no action at all in protecting the value of your home.
Those who bought homes a decade ago, took a ten-year cruise and looked at the value of their residence today will wonder what all the fuss is about. By the way, I met just such a person on the Queen Mary 2 last summer. Yes, ten years at sea!
And the next recession is likely to be nowhere near as bad as the last one, which was a twice-a-century event. So it’s probably not worth selling your home and buying it back later, as I did during the Great Recession.
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/home-sales-signboard.png345612MHFTRhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMHFTR2019-09-11 01:04:282019-10-14 09:48:32Has the Value of Your Home Just Peaked?
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Is gold your best performing asset for the next five years? Is it high-growth technology stocks? Energy stocks? Or maybe biotech shares?
How about French collectable postage stamps or vintage racing cars?
Nope, you're not even close. I'll give you a hint: You're probably sitting in it.
Yes, the best performing investment you will own for the next five years will most likely be the home you live in.
Psshaww you may say. Perhaps even balderdash! However, if you look at the crucial data that drives this long-ignored sector, my conclusions are unassailable.
If fact, you can pretty much count on your home to appreciate at a 3% to 4% annual rate until well into the next decade, and much more if you are fortunate enough to live on the red hot west coast.
Net out the copious tax breaks that still come with home ownership, and your take home will be even higher than that.
This beats the daylights out of stocks (SPY) (1.84% yield), 10-year Treasury bonds (TLT) (2.85%) and approaches junk bonds (HYG) (5.74%) in terms of the potential returns.
For a start, the Federal Reserve's go-slow policy on interest rate rises is hugely pro housing.
The conventional 30-year fixed home mortgage can now be had for a bargain 4.5%. And many finance their properties with the 5/1 ARMs that I have been recommending, which are currently going for only 3.25%.
Worried about what happens in five years when the interest rate is reset? Just refinance during the next recession, which will almost certainly happen well before then, and you'll probably get a lower rate than you can get now.
That is, assuming you still have a job.
The good news for those homeowners who rely on the floating rates of an adjustable rate mortgage is that this is not a low interest rate decade, but a low interest rate century.
Another positive is weekly jobless claims of 222,000 at 43-year low, and a decade low unemployment rate of 4.0%, meaning that a lot more people have the income with which to purchase homes, far more than only a couple of years ago.
Not only will this be a low interest rate century, it will be a low energy cost century as well. If solar energy costs continue their dramatic rate of improvement, around 50% every four years, it will nearly be free by 2030.
Not only will free energy provide a big underpinning under home values. It will also increase the value of suburban homes where commuting is a major factor.
It gets better.
You know that Millennial of yours who's been living in your basement since he graduated from college?
Go downstairs and take a look. Chances are he probably moved out when you weren't looking, turning his prodigious gaming skills into a high-paying coding job.
What's more, he's now dating a girl. You know, the one with the nose ring, the streak of purple hair, and tattoos up and down both arms?
That leads to family formation. And you know what? The most important trend affecting the economy that no one knows about is that THE UNITED STATES IS ABOUT TO ENJOY ANOTHER BABY BOOM!
That's why new household formations are likely to jump from the current 1.2 to 1.5 million a year in the coming decade.
However, only 1 million homes a year are being built, thanks to the halving of construction capacity in the aftermath of the Great Recession. Subtract from that 250,000 houses a year that get demolished.
Does anyone hear the words "short squeeze"?
That means 85 million Millennials will be chasing the homes of only 65 million Gen Xer's. Here in the San Francisco Bay Area they are showing up at weekend open houses and paying cash for beautiful $3 million homes with great views, writing the check right on the spot.
Americans aren't the only ones buying homes. Some 8% of all the real estate sold in the U.S. in 2017 was to foreign investors, largely Chinese and Hispanics, according to the National Association of Realtors. That is an all-time high. They view U.S. real estate as a great asset protection strategy.
Are you convinced now? Are you ready to jump into the real estate boom and participate more than just through your residence?
Fortunate, there are a number of ways you can achieve this.
You can also go into traditional new homebuilders, such as KB Homes (KBH), Pulte Homes (PHM), and DH Horton (DHI). Another option is to take a basket approach by picking up the iShares U.S. Home Construction ETF (ITB).
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/Open-house-story-3-image-5-e1527803775253.jpg199300MHFTRhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMHFTR2018-06-01 01:06:222018-06-01 01:06:22Here is Your Top-Performing Investment for the Next Five Years
The homebuilders, after delivering one of the most prolific investment performance of any sector until the end of January, suddenly collapsed.
Since then, they have been dead as a door knob, flat on their backs, barely exhibiting a breath of life. While most of the market has since seen massive short covering rallies, the homebuilders have remained moribund.
The knee-jerk reaction has been to blame rising interest rates. But in fact, rates have barely moved since the homebuilders peaked, the 10-year US treasury yield remaining confined to an ultra-narrow tedious 2.72% to 2.95% yield.
The surprise Canadian limber import duty has definitely hurt, raising the price of a new home by an average of $3,000. But that is not enough to demolish the entire sector, especially given long lines at homebuilder model homes.
Are the homebuilders gone for good? Or are they just resting.
I vote for the later.
For years now, I have begged, pleaded, and beseeched readers to pour as much money as they can into residential real estate.
Investing in your own residence has generated far and away the largest returns on investment for the past five years, and this will continue for the next 10 to 15 years.
For we are still in the early innings of a major real estate boom.
A home you buy today could increase in value tenfold by 2030, and more if you do so on the high-growth coasts.
And while I have been preaching this view to followers for years, I have been assaulted by the slings and arrows of naysayers predicting that the next housing crash is just around the corner - only this time, it will be worse.
I have recently gained some important new firepower in my campaign.
My friends at alma mater UC Berkley (Go Bears!), specifically the Fisher Center for Real Estate and Urban Economics, have just published a report written by the Rosen Consulting Group that is blowing the socks off the entire real estate world.
The implications for markets, and indeed the nation as a whole, are nothing less than mind-blowing.
It's like having a Marine detachment of 155 mm howitzers suddenly come in on your side.
The big revelation is that only a few minor tweaks and massaging of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010 could unleash a new tidal wave of home buyers that will send house prices, and the shares of homebuilders (ITB) ballistic.
The real estate industry would at last be restored to its former glory.
That's the happy ending. Now let's get down to the nitty gritty.
First, let's review the wreckage of the 2008 housing crash.
Real estate probably suffered more than any other industry during the Great Recession.
After all, the banks received a federal bailout, and General Motors was taken over by the Feds. Remember Cash for Clunkers?
No such luck with politically unconnected real estate agents and homebuilders.
As a result, private homeownership in the US has cratered from 69.2% in 2006 to 63.4% in 2016, a 50-year low.
Homeownership for married couples was cut from 84.1% to 79.6%.
Among major cities, San Diego led the charge to the downside, an area where minority and immigrant participation in the market is particularly high, with homeownership shrinking from 65.7% to a lowly 51.8%.
Home price declines were worse in the major subprime cities of Las Vegas, Phoenix, and Miami.
There were a staggering 9.4 million foreclosures during 2007-2014, with adjustable rate loans accounting for two-thirds of the total.
Some 8.7 million jobs were lost from 2007-2010, while the unemployment rate soared from 5.0% to 10%. The collapse in disposable income that followed made a rapid recovery in home prices impossible.
As a result, real estate's contribution to US GDP growth fell from 17.9% of the total to only 15.6% in 2016.
That is a big hit for the economy and is a major reason why growth has remained stuck in recent years at a 2% annual rate.
While the ruins were still smoking, Congress passed Dodd-Frank in 2010. The bill succeeded in preventing any more large banks from going under, with massive recapitalization requirements.
As a result, US banks are now the strongest in the world (and also a great BUY at these levels).
But it also clipped the banks' wings with stringent new lending restrictions.
I recently refinanced my homes to lock in 3% interest rates for the long term, since inflation is returning, and I can't tell you what a nightmare it was.
I had to pay a year's worth of home insurance and county property taxes in advance, which were then kept in an impound account.
I was forced to supply two years worth of bank statements for five different accounts.
Handing over two years worth of federal tax returns wasn't good enough.
To prevent borrowers from ginning up their own on TurboTax, a common tactic for marginal borrowers before the last crash, they must be independently verified with a full IRS transcript.
Guess what? A budget constrained IRS is remarkably slow and inefficient at performing this task. Three attempts are common, while your loan sits in limbo.
(And don't even think of asking for Donald Trump's return when you do this. They have NO sense of humor at the IRS!)
Heaven help you if you have a FICO score under 700.
I had to hand over a dozen letters of explanation dealing with assorted anomalies in my finances. My life is complicated.
Their chief goal seemed to be to absolve the lender from any liability whatsoever.
And here's the real killer.
From 2014, banks were forced to require from borrowers a 43% debt service to income ratio. In other words, your monthly interest payment, property taxes, and real estate taxes can't exceed 43% of your monthly gross income.
This hurdle alone has been the death of a thousand loans.
It is no surprise then that the outstanding balance of home mortgages has seen its sharpest drop in history, from $11.3 trillion to $9.8 trillion during 2008-2014. It is down by a third since the 2007 peak.
Loans that DO get done have seen their average FICO scores jump from 707 to 760.
Rocketing home prices are making matters worse, by reducing affordability.
Only 56% of the population can now qualify to buy the mean American home priced at $224,000, which is up 7.7% YOY.
Residential fixed investment is now 32% lower than the 2005 peak.
Also weighing on the market was a student loan balance that rocketed by 400% to $1.3 trillion since 2003. This eliminated a principal source of first-time buyers from the market, a major source of new capital at the low end.
Now for the good news.
Keep Dodd-Frank's capital requirements, but ease up on the lending standards only slightly, and all of the trends that have been a drag on the market quickly reverse.
And yes, some 2.3% in missing US GDP comes back in a hurry, and then some. That's a whole year's worth of economic growth at current rates.
Rising incomes generated by a full employment economy increase loan approvals.
Foreclosure rates will fall.
More capital will pour into homebuilding, alleviating severely constrained supply.
More investment in homes as inflation hedges steps up from here.
The entry of Millennials into the market in a serious way for the first time further increases demand.
Promised individual tax cuts will add a turbocharger to this market.
There is one way the Trump administration could demolish this housing renaissance.
If the deductibility of home mortgage interest from taxable income on Form 1040 Schedule "A" is cut back or eliminated to pay for tax cuts for the wealthy, a proposal now being actively discussed in the White House, the whole party is canceled.
The average American will lose his biggest tax break, and the impact on housing will be huge.
A continued war on immigrants will also hurt, which accounted for one-third of all new households from 1994-2015.
You see, we let them in for a good reason.
Assuming this policy self-inflicted wound doesn't happen, the entire homebuilding sector is a screaming "BUY."
On the menu are Toll Brothers (TOL), DH Horton (DHI), and Pulte Homes (PHM).
You can also add the IShares US Home Construction ETF (ITB), a basket of the leading homebuilding names (For the prospectus, click here.)
To read the UC Berkeley report in its entirety, entitled Homeownership in Crisis: Where Are We Now? a must for any serious real estate professional or investor, please download the PDF file for free by clicking here.
The bottom line here is that after a three-month break, the stirrings of a recovery in homebuilders may be just beginning.
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/Coast-image-6-e1524006948851.jpg327580MHFTRhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMHFTR2018-04-18 01:06:012018-04-18 01:06:01Why the Homebuilders Are Not Dead Yet
Real estate brokers are still reeling from the news that December existing home sales rocketed by a blockbuster 14.7%, to an annualized 5.46 million units.
And now I hear that Apple (AAPL) is planning on building a second new research and development campus that will need 20,000 new high tech workers. The housing crisis here in the San Francisco Bay area just went from bad to worse.
It is all fresh fuel for a continuation in the bull market for US residential real estate, not just for this year, but for another decade.
Friends in the industry tell me the eye popping numbers were due to the implementation of the TILA-RESPA Integrated Disclosure (TRID) in October.
Dubbed the ?Know before you owe? requirement, TRID is the inevitable outcome of the 2008 subprime housing crash.
If you weren?t born yet in 2008, or were living in a cave on a remote Pacific island back then, go watch the movie ?The Big Short? for a further explanation of those dark days.
As a result, real estate closings now take at least a week longer, and sometimes more, thanks to a new requirement for several three day ?cooling off periods.?
When the new law kicked in, TRID nearly brought he industry to a halt, and firms were sent scurrying to their attorneys to draw up the new disclosure forms to stay within the law.
TRID undoubtedly was responsible for the slowdown in the market in the run up to December.
Although prices seem high now, I am convinced that we are only at the beginning of a long term secular bull market in housing. Anything you purchase now is going to make you look like a genius ten years down the road.
The best is yet to come.
The big driver will be demographics, of course.
From 2022 onward, 65 million Gen Xer?s will be joined by 85 million late blooming Millennials in bidding wars for the same houses. That will create a market of 150 million buyers, unprecedented in the history of the American real estate market.
In the meantime, 80 million baby boomers, net sellers and downsizers of homes for the past decade, will slowly die off and disappear from the scene as a negative influence. Only one third are still working.
The first boomer, Kathleen Casey-Kirschling, born seconds after midnight on January 1, 1946, will become 76 years old by then. A former school teacher, she took early retirement at 62.
The real fat on the fire here is that 5 million homes went missing in action this decade, thanks to the financial crisis. They were never built.
This is the result of the bankruptcy of several homebuilders, and the new found ultra conservatism of the survivors, like DR Horton (DHI), Lennar Homes (LEN), and Pulte Group (PHM).
Did I mention that all of this makes this sector a screaming ?BUY?, once the market moves into ?RISK ON? mode later in the year?
Talk to any real estate agent and they will complain about the shortage of inventory (except in Chicago, the slowest growing market in the country).
Prices are so high already that flippers have been squeezed out of the market for good. Bottom feeders, like hedge funds buying at the bankruptcy auctions, are a distant memory. Some now own more than 20,000 homes.
Income taxes are certain to rise in coming years, and the generous deductions allowed homeowners are looking more attractive by the day.
And let?s face it, ultra low interest rates aren?t going to be here forever. Borrow at 3% today against a long term 3% inflation rate, and you are essentially getting you house for free.
The rising rents that are turning Millennials from renters to buyers may be the first sign of real inflation beyond the increasingly dear health care and higher education that we're are already seeing.
And Millennials are having kids that demand a bigger living space! Who knew?
https://www.madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/Home-House1-e1453928682856.jpg300400Mad Hedge Fund Traderhttps://madhedgefundtrader.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-mad-hedge-logo-transparent-192x192_f9578834168ba24df3eb53916a12c882.pngMad Hedge Fund Trader2016-01-28 01:07:442016-01-28 01:07:44Why the Real Estate Boom Has a Decade to Run
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