The bursting of the global housing bubble is only halfway through
Nov 26th 2011 | The Economist.com
MANY of the world’s financial and economic woes since 2008
began with the bursting of the biggest bubble in history. Never before
had house prices risen so fast, for so long, in so many countries. Yet
the bust has been much less widespread than the boom. Home prices
tumbled by 34% in America from 2006 to their low point earlier this
year; in Ireland they plunged by an even more painful 45% from their
peak in 2007; and prices have fallen by around 15% in Spain and Denmark.
But in most other countries they have dipped by less than 10%, as in
Britain and Italy. In some countries, such as Australia, Canada and
Sweden, prices wobbled but then surged to new highs. As a result, many
property markets are still looking uncomfortably overvalued.
The latest update of The Economist’s global
house-price indicators shows that prices are now falling in eight of the
16 countries in the table, compared with five in late 2010. (For house
prices from more countries see our website).
To assess the risks of a
further slump, we track two measures of valuation. The first is the
price-to-income ratio, a gauge of affordability. The second is the
price-to-rent ratio, which is a bit like the price-to-earnings ratio
used to value companies. Just as the value of a share should reflect
future profits that a company is expected to earn, house prices should
reflect the expected benefits from home ownership: namely the rents
earned by property investors (or those saved by owner-occupiers).
If
both of these measures are well above their long-term average, which we
have calculated since 1975 for most countries, this could signal that
property is overvalued.
Based on the average of the two measures, home prices are
overvalued by about 25% or more in Australia, Belgium, Canada, France,
New Zealand, Britain, the Netherlands, Spain and Sweden (see table).
Indeed, in the first four of those countries housing looks more
overvalued than it was in America at the peak of its bubble. Despite
their collapse, Irish home prices are still slightly above “fair”
value—partly because they were incredibly overvalued at their peak, and
partly because incomes and rents have fallen sharply. In contrast, homes
in America, Japan and Germany are all significantly undervalued. In the
late 1990s the average house price in Germany was twice that in France;
now it is 20% cheaper.
This raises two questions. First, since American homes now look
cheap, are prices set to rebound? Average house prices are 8%
undervalued relative to rents, and 22% undervalued relative to income
(see chart). Prices may have reached a floor, but this is no guarantee
of an imminent bounce. In Britain and Sweden in the mid-1990s, prices
undershot fair value by around 35%. Prices in Britain did not really
start to rise for almost four years after they bottomed. Some 4m
foreclosed homes could come onto America’s market, which may hold down
prices.
The second question is whether home prices in markets that are still
overvalued are likely to fall. Some economists reject our measures of
overvaluation, arguing that lower interest rates justify higher prices
because buyers can take out bigger mortgages. There is some truth in
this, but interest rates will not always be so low. The recent jump in
bond yields in some euro-area countries has raised mortgage rates for
new borrowers.
And low rates need to be balanced against the fact that tighter
credit conditions make it harder for homebuyers to get mortgages. The
average deposit needed by a British first-time buyer is now equivalent
to 90% of average annual earnings, according to Capital Economics, a
consultancy. It was less than 20% in the late 1990s.
Another popular
argument used to justify sky-high prices in countries such as Australia
and Canada is that a rising population pushes up demand. But this should
raise both prices and rents, leaving their ratios unchanged.
Prices do not necessarily need to drop sharply to return to fair
value. Adjustment could come through higher rents and wages. With low
inflation, however, it could take a decade or more before price ratios
return to their long-run average in some countries.
Jingle mail
American prices fell sharply, even though homes were less overvalued
than they were in many other countries, because high-risk mortgages and a
surge in unemployment caused distressed sales. In most other countries,
lenders avoided the worst excesses of subprime lending, and
unemployment rose by less, so there were fewer forced sales dragging
prices down. America is also unusual in having non-recourse mortgages
that let borrowers walk away with no liability.
An optimist could therefore argue that our gauges overstate the
extent to which house prices are overvalued, and that if markets are
only a bit too expensive they can adjust gradually without a sharp fall.
It is important to remember, however, that lower interest rates and
rising populations were used to justify higher prices in America and
Ireland before their bubbles burst so spectacularly.
Another concern is that Australia, Britain, Canada, the Netherlands,
New Zealand, Spain and Sweden all have even higher household-debt
burdens in relation to income than America did at the peak of its
bubble. Overvalued prices and large debts leave households vulnerable to
a rise in unemployment or higher mortgage rates. A credit crunch or
recession could cause house prices to tumble in many more countries.
No comments:
Post a Comment