Housing Update: Home Prices Unlikely to Decline

Housing Update: Home Prices Unlikely to Decline

Rising rents and mortgage payments have been at the center of the inflation discussion. Our Global Chief Economist assesses whether monetary policy can effectively blunt those figures.


----- Transcript -----


Seth Carpenter: Welcome to Thoughts on the Market. I'm Seth Carpenter, Morgan Stanley's Global Chief Economist. Along with my colleagues bringing you a variety of perspectives, today I'll be talking about the housing market, inflation, growth and monetary policy.

It's Monday, July 1st, at 11am in New York.

Housing is at the center of many macro debates from growth to inflation. And when you put those two together – monetary policy. House prices have continued to rise despite high interest rates, which gives the impression to some of stalled deflation and forces consumers at times to make some really difficult choices. And in some economies, there's a seeming lack of responsiveness of housing to higher interest rates. All of which tends to prompt questions about the efficacy of monetary policy.

So where are we? We think monetary policy is still working through housing as it usually does, but supply shortages, or in some places just idiosyncratic factors like buildable lands or permitting, that's supported home prices. And as has been the case across several sectors in this business cycle, there really are some factors about housing that's just different in this cycle than in previous ones. For the U.S., a key part of the housing story has been the mortgage lock in for homeowners. Our strategists have noted that the gap between the current new mortgage rate and the average effective mortgage rate is at historical highs. And the share of 30 year fixed rate mortgages is at its highest in a decade.

Consequently, the inventory of existing houses has remained low because homeowners who have those really low mortgages are reluctant to move unless they have to. The market has become thinner with less available supply; and then if we think more broadly for the economy, there's a risk of labor market frictions if that mortgage lock in also reduces labor mobility.

Now, there will be a decline in mortgage rates if we get the modest easing cycle from the Fed that we expect. But that decline will be similarly modest so that gap in rates will not be fully closed even if it narrows. And so there might be some uplift to supply of housing, but it might not be huge. That decline in mortgage rates can also supply demand, so then we have to think about the net of this shift in demand and the shift in supply. And ultimately what we think is going to happen is that there'll be a moderation in home price appreciation, but not an outright decline in home prices.

First, the choice of housing for a lot of households is do you buy or do you rent? If you've got high home prices and high mortgages, buying is much less affordable and so it pushes people into renting, which could push up rents. That phenomenon is partly responsible for the surge in rents that we've seen over the past few years.

In the longer run, there should be a sort of arbitrage condition between home prices and rents. And while rising home prices can impinge the spending power for first time homebuyers, rising house prices can actually boost sentiment and consumption for existing homeowners.

And that mortgage lock in that I talked about before? Well, that can actually support aggregate consumption to some degree because now there's predictability of cash flows and the monthly payment is pretty low.

So what do we do when we take all of this together? The housing market might be telling us that monetary policy is working a bit less effectively than historically, but not that monetary policy is not working.

Home price appreciation is moderating. Housing starts have slowed, as usual, following those big rate increases. But that slowing? It's actually been a bit inconsistent because mortgage lock has meant that new supply is the only supply. Existing home sales, by contrast, are just plain weak. They're about as weak as they were around the financial crisis.

We do not think the housing market overall is at risk of collapse, but monetary policy is restraining activity in a very familiar way.

Thanks for listening, and if you enjoy this podcast, please leave us a review wherever you listen and share Thoughts on the Market with a friend or colleague today.

Avsnitt(1514)

Mike Wilson: A Tougher Road Ahead for Small Caps?

Mike Wilson: A Tougher Road Ahead for Small Caps?

After almost a year of extraordinary outperformance, could small caps could see more difficulties ahead as re-opening dynamics up the risk of cost pressures?

15 Mars 20213min

Andrew Sheets: A Complicated 2021 for Emerging Markets?

Andrew Sheets: A Complicated 2021 for Emerging Markets?

With global growth set to exceed expectations in 2021, emerging markets assets would appear set for outperformance. But this year, three factors cloud that narrative.

12 Mars 20212min

Special Episode: Markets and the Next Big Debate - Infrastructure

Special Episode: Markets and the Next Big Debate - Infrastructure

Conversations around the “Build Back Better” U.S. infrastructure plan are ramping up. What do investors need to know about its potential impact on markets?

11 Mars 20218min

Michael Zezas: Policy Trends Are Now Portfolio Trends

Michael Zezas: Policy Trends Are Now Portfolio Trends

Why the ongoing dynamics of trade, fiscal policy, taxation and geopolitical tensions mean investors need to focus on more than just the Fed and the business cycle.

10 Mars 20212min

Special Episode: Markets Ahead of Reopening - What’s Mispriced?

Special Episode: Markets Ahead of Reopening - What’s Mispriced?

Ahead of a possible re-opening, which companies might retain gains seen in the pandemic, which will revert to pre-COVID norms and which are mispriced?

9 Mars 202110min

Mike Wilson: Still a Bull Under the Hood

Mike Wilson: Still a Bull Under the Hood

The current correction may be driven in part by the rise in U.S. Treasuries yields, but Chief Investment Officer Mike Wilson still sees a bull market in the value and more cyclically exposed equity categories.

8 Mars 20214min

Andrew Sheets: The Great Debate on Rates

Andrew Sheets: The Great Debate on Rates

Do higher interest rates invariably lead to weaker equities and credit markets? The answer is a bit more complicated after factoring in economic optimism.

5 Mars 20212min

Special Episode: U.S. Home Prices - Is This Time Different?

Special Episode: U.S. Home Prices - Is This Time Different?

Home prices have been steadily climbing all across the U.S. How should Americans think about home prices, rising interest rates and affordability?

4 Mars 20219min

Populärt inom Business & ekonomi

badfluence
framgangspodden
varvet
rss-jossan-nina
rss-borsens-finest
rss-svart-marknad
uppgang-och-fall
affarsvarlden
lastbilspodden
24fragor
fill-or-kill
rss-kort-lang-analyspodden-fran-di
avanzapodden
kapitalet-en-podd-om-ekonomi
borsmorgon
rss-dagen-med-di
bathina-en-podcast
tabberaset
rss-en-rik-historia
rss-inga-dumma-fragor-om-pengar