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Housing Starts Fall Through the Floor

by: Dean Baker  |  Center for Economic and Policy Research

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The vast inventory of unsold new and existing homes has slowed construction, leading to the lowest rate of new construction projects in 50 years. (Photo: Chip Py)

    The sharp fall in construction means that builders can no longer get credit.

    The Census Bureau reported a sharp drop in housing starts in November from a downwardly-revised October rate. The 625,000 annual rate of construction reported for November is 24.8 percent below the September rate. It is 47.0 percent below the November 2007 rate and it is 70.9 percent below the rate in November of 2005 at the peak of the building boom. In fact, the start reported for November is lower than any rate reported for the last fifty years.

    The November drop hit all regions of the country, but the Northeast saw the sharpest downturn. Starts fell by 34.6 percent in the region and are now down by 60.2 percent from year ago levels. This seems to be a case where the Northeast is catching up with the rest of the country, since starts had previously fallen somewhat less in the region. It is worth noting that the absolute levels of starts in the Northeast were far lower than in the other three regions, so this drop has much impact on the national economy.

    This plunge in starts is a necessary part of the adjustment process in the housing market. There is no way to eliminate the vast inventory of unsold new and existing homes without a sharp slowing in construction. However, the drop in the last two months suggests that the housing market is in a qualitatively different state than it had been even three months ago.

    Presumably, builders are cutting back in large part because credit conditions have tightened to the point that they have no choice. This would be consistent with the tightening of credit that took hold in September.

    It is important to recognize that this is not necessarily a case of a "credit crunch" inhibiting economic activity. Given the vast oversupply of homes on the market, building new homes in many areas is not a good business proposition right now. Newly built homes can be expected to sit on the market for more than a year in many areas and may eventually sell for prices that are far below recent levels. Banks would be wise not to make loans to builders under such circumstances even if the banks were fully solvent and solidly capitalized.

    It will be interesting to see how this plunge in starts is reflected in prices. There is a considerable lag in the data in the key price indices. The indices reflect contracted prices, but only get reported after sales are closed. The sales that are contracted in November will mostly be closed in January, which means that we will not get price data for the month until February.

    However, if the plunge in starts reflects the inability of builders to continue to get credit from banks, then it likely indicates that they are also having difficulty obtaining the credit needed to sustain large inventories of unsold homes. This would imply a large sell-off of inventory, presumably at sharply lower prices. If this is the case, we should expect to see a big upturn in new home sales in the November report that will come out next week, with substantial price declines. (The new home sales data show contract prices, so they are more current than other indices.)

    If builders are cutting prices to dump inventory, it does not appear that homeowners have yet followed the same path. The Mortgage Bankers Association's purchase applications index continues to show very low levels, even as mortgage interest rates are approaching 5.0 percent. The low measure on this index is the most glaring refutation of the claim that people are unable to get credit. If creditworthy applicants were being denied loans by banks unable or unwilling to lend, then the ratio of mortgage applications to home sales should be soaring. Since there is no notable increase in this ratio, access to credit is obviously not an issue.

    The drop in housing starts indicates that housing will again be a sharp negative in GDP this quarter. With sharp downturns in consumption and a weakening trade picture, 4th quarter GDP is certain to show an extraordinary decline.

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    Dean Baker is co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, in Washington, D.C. CEPR's Housing Market Monitor is published weekly and provides an incisive breakdown of the latest indicators and developments in the housing sector.

  

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This will continue until

This will continue until housing prices fall MUCH farther to a fraction of what they are now. All the suckers have bought and they are underwater now. The only real recovery is when housing becomes affordable to all the underpaid or underemployed workers who built most of them. Once housing prices become affordable, then other aspects of the economy might start to recover too. Did you pay too much? Too bad.

I wonder about builders. I'd

I wonder about builders. I'd bet that a lot of them paid too much. With a housing boom, it doesn't matter; even if you paid too much, weren't particularly cost-conscious, you can still sell the house for more than you built it. Plus, materials were very high because of the boom; now they're not. So, not only can't they sell what they built, they probably won't be able to get out what they put into it. They'll lose money even if the sell their inventory. There may be some who aren't selling for precisely this reason. With the fall off in housing starts, a lot of builders are effectively out of business, their crews out of their jobs. However, if any of them can switch from private homes to infrastructure construction, they could make a bundle once the Democrat-Obama stimulus package is passed, and certainly construction workers will then be able to find work. Meanwhile, if you can get credit, then now would be the time to buy your dream house--unless you're worried about losing your job. Does that anxiety include just about everyone still employed? It's one of the reasons for the shortage of credit. That's part of the problem: everything feeds on everything else, which is why a massive stimulus package may be our best hope; it could affect enough of the economy to counteract the drag of all the sectors collapsing, but only if it's large enough.

Progressives should have

Progressives should have more compassion for builders. They are losing their employees and losing their businesses right now. Many subcontractors are headed for bankruptcy, if they are not there already. The residential housing industry provides an excellent opportunity for progressive legislation designed to smooth out swings in the housing market. The FHA should buy up excess inventory at prices that would allow builders to get out of their existing loan commitments and put some money back in their pockets. Then, the FHA should lease-to-buy (or even just lease) these houses out. Over time these homes will become more valuable, and they can then be sold at a profit. The FHA should be used to regulate growth in residential construction, using market signals as its guiding principles.

Gentlemen, forget all the

Gentlemen, forget all the hand rubbing and the pious theorizing. The answer is that there was a wild amount of over building fueled by reckless lending and the get rich hysteria that is the stuff of booms. Worse this all happened as the economy was taking on the image of a mirage. Money flowed in and jobs-manufacturing flowed out. Home building was one of the few make work alternatives. Now its dead in its tracks and nobody has a clue as what to do in order to supply well compensated jobs to the labor force. Stop thinking credit and start thinking buying power. That's the real problem.

And, with the republican

And, with the republican penchant for cooking the books, who really knows what these numbers mean? I'm pretty sure da shadow ain't got this one..........

Sshhh... What is that smell?

Sshhh... What is that smell? Do you hear that? You know what that sound is?...Its the sound of a Depression on America's backside. As far as I see it, all these bureaucrats and politicians are describing America's economic state as a mere recession. But I listen to my nose, and its warning me of the stench of an economic depression. Don't let Washington and Wall Street sell that lame, "square wheel"("We Are in the Greatest Recession"). Tell Washington and that 1% of people that control America-"Square Wheels Don't Roll and We Ain't Buying It!"