On The Bursting of Bubbles
Well, UCLA certainly had their bubble burst – and so did college hoops fans, who, after the best run-up in tournament history, had to suffer through three lop-sided affairs in the semifinals and championship. A more important bubble has been hanging over this economy for quite some time, and it has me very concerned. I’m talking, of course, about housing.
Some of my readers have made it clear they don’t share my concern – but what really has me worried is (a) the amount of debt consumers already carry (much from refinancing), and (b) the amount of mortgage debt in ARMs. Andrew Laperriere of ISI Group, writing at the Weekly Standard, does nothing to set my mind at ease:
With new home sales down 10.5 percent in February, and with home prices declining for the fourth month in a row, it’s high time for a sober look at the consequences of a major housing correction. The Federal Reserve, Wall Street economists, and other observers of the U.S. economy are closely watching the housing market because it has been a key driver of economic growth over the past several years.
Roughly a quarter of the jobs created since the 2001 recession have been in construction, real estate, and mortgage finance. Even more important, consumers have withdrawn $2.5 trillion in equity from their homes during this time, spending as much as half of it and thus making a huge contribution to the growth the U.S. economy has enjoyed in recent years (consumer spending accounts for two-thirds of GDP).
But consumers cannot keep spending more than they make. Eventually, home prices will flatten, the flood of “cash out” refinancings will become a trickle, and consumer spending will slow, as will job creation in housing-related industries. The big question is this: Will the housing sector experience a soft landing and slow the economy or a hard landing that pushes us into recession?
Countless articles in the financial and popular press have now been devoted to the question of whether we are in a housing “bubble.” It is a favorite topic of many liberal economists, columnists, and bloggers, who argue that President Bush’s tax cuts and other policies have created a hollow and unsustainable economy. They are laying the groundwork to hang a housing bust around the necks of President Bush and congressional Republicans.
Economic observers on the right have been strangely silent on this debate. A few conservatives have argued that the record appreciation of home prices is justified by economic fundamentals. Others, who apparently slept through the 80 percent decline in the NASDAQ, don’t believe bubbles are possible in a free market economy. Certainly most conservatives have an innate optimism about America and the resilience of its free market economy, and a strong and well-justified aversion to doomsayers. And naturally, the White House and congressional Republicans have no interest in highlighting the vulnerabilities of the economy.
Yet the concerns about unsustainable growth in consumer debt and home prices are not easily dismissed. A weakening housing market could transform what has been a virtuous cycle into a vicious one, substantially reducing economic growth during the next couple of years (and going into the 2008 election). If economic analysts on the right ignore this risk, they may be blindsided by a weaker economy. They will also be unprepared to answer those on the left who will blame tax cuts for what could be a painful unwinding of a credit bubble that, in fact, was fueled by a loose monetary policy from 2002 to 2004.
The whole article is so good (if terrifying) that excerpts don’t do it justice, but let’s consider those ARMs I spoke of earlier:
Not only are house prices at extreme levels by traditional measures, but the manner in which home purchases have been financed in recent years is also disconcerting. Consider the growth of interest-only and “pay-option” adjustable rate mortgages–loans that initially don’t require borrowers to repay principal. With the latter, also known as an option-ARM, the outstanding balance owed can actually get bigger every month. A few years ago these loans barely existed. Last year they accounted for more than a third of new loans. What’s worse, the vast majority of these loans were extended based on “stated income,” which means the bank didn’t verify the income of the borrower. Of course, consumers usually have to pay more if they don’t provide tax and payroll records to the bank to verify their income. Common sense suggests many are fibbing about their income to qualify for a larger loan.
Such loans are risky because after an initial period of three or five years with low rates and no principal payments, the loans “reset,” and consumers can experience 50 percent or even 100 percent increases in their monthly payments. About $2 trillion in loans, or a quarter of outstanding mortgage debt, will reset in this fashion during the next two years according to Economy.com. Therefore, millions of households are about to experience significant payment shock.
A recent study by First American Corp. shows that many of the borrowers who have taken advantage of the lowest teaser rates and are going to experience the greatest payment increases have little or even negative equity in their homes. Fully 22 percent of the borrowers who borrowed at initial rates of 2.5 percent or less during the past two years have negative equity in their homes, and 40 percent have less than 10 percent equity. The study also finds that a third of people who took out adjustable rate mortgages last year have negative equity and 52 percent have less than 10 percent equity. How is this possible? One reason is that 43 percent of first-time home buyers paid no down payment last year.
If this isn’t a housing mania, why have so many people embraced financing schemes that leave them vulnerable to higher interest rates or even a modest correction in home prices?
Laperriere offers no policy suggestions, just a warning of a future that is quite possible, if not quite certain…

Well, you can’t protect people from their own stupidity — people who signed up for ARMs and no-interest mortgages are consenting adults who made a bet that interest rates would stay low. Other people (or maybe the same ones) bet a lot of money in the late 1990′s that companies like pets.com would take over the world. One of the great things about capitalism is that it periodically washes out the excesses by flushing out weak hands. While this may be painful for those getting flushed, it’s hard to feel sorry for people with self-inflicted wounds.
Agreed. It is called “caveat emptor”. Housing bubbles, stock bubbles, and pyramid schemes all continue to exist and occur for the same reason: because lots of people believe they are smarter or more clever than everyone else and won’t end up being the dupe.
There have been something like 15 consecutive Fed rate hikes with the express purpose of keeping inflation in check. While we haven’t seen many definitive reports on the existence of a housing bubble, or that this non-existent bubble would soon burst, only a fool would allow himself to ignore the reality of over speculation in the housing market.
Unfortunately, if the losses are widespread we are likely to see some significant retraction in the economy.
Agree with the above comments – too many folks have been “house flipping” over the past few years, using precisely the same financing schemes outlined in the article. Sure sounds like the “greater fool theory” that Joe Kennedy espoused when he sold off his stocks, right before the ’29 crash: “only a fool sells at the top.”
Yeah, but too many fools equals recession…
Hmmm – good point.
Barnard Baruch said that he made his millions on Wall Street because “I always sold too soon.”
My favorite piece of financial advice is from John Maynard Keynes: “the market will remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent.”
Amen to that…
Mark is right of course that a significant spike in foreclosure filings and a fall in the home-building employment market could trigger regional recessions. I say regional because real estate markets are intensely rationalized where a gain in San Francisco does not imply a gain in Anchorage. Nationwide there has been some up-trend in foreclosure filings so far this year, but the real test will come in Q3 2007 when the bulk of the ARMs will reach the third year of maturity. If there is no large spike at that time then we can say that we may have passed the inflection point for a real-estate recession.