Today’s Housing Market Looks Even Worse than 2008

Via Birch Gold Group

These Housing Market Trends Are More Alarming than the Peak of the 2008 Bubble

From Peter Reagan at Birch Gold Group

Since we’ve been in a constant state of recession watch for a while now, today I’m going to explore the current state of the housing market.

Why housing? Well, here’s what The Economist has to say about it:

The importance of American housing resides not so much in its absolute size, big though it is at about $45 [trillion] in total value. Rather, it serves as a bellwether of the economy’s performance amid rising interest rates. Has the Federal Reserve lifted rates by enough to calm inflation without crushing growth? Has it gone too far? Or, perhaps, not far enough? As one of the earliest and largest sectors to react to changes, the property market offers some answers.

Owning a home is a crucial financial step for Americans – and, for most of us, our home represents the largest single investment we ever make. A massive amount of our nation’s wealth ($45 trillion dollars!) is tied up in homes.

That’s why the housing market matters whether you rent or own. The housing market is a reliable leading economic indicator.

As goes housing, so goes the economy – and right now, it’s not exactly going great…

79% of Americans say it’s not a good time to buy a house

A recent Gallup poll asked whether it’s a good time to buy a home. (In 2003, that answer was a resounding yes.)

Not anymore.

There’s a capsule history of housing market polling, since the last housing bubble burst in 2007:

…home prices headed downward the next two years, and generally were flat through 2011. With lower prices and generally low interest rates, public optimism about home buying recovered, climbing to 71% in 2009 and holding in the high 60s or low 70s through 2017.

By 2020, in the early stages of the coronavirus pandemic when economic activity was severely limited in many parts of the country, 50%, a then-record low, thought it was a good time to buy a house.

In the past two years, as housing prices have soared and the Federal Reserve has raised interest rates to try to tame inflation, houses have become less affordable for many Americans, and views of the housing market have tumbled.

The housing market was already becoming unaffordable for many families back in 2021.

It’s gotten much worse since then.

Prices rose significantly, along with interest rates… In the last three years, the typical mortgage payment has risen 71% to a record high. (I had to triple-check the math.)

Mortgage broker Redfin published a chart showing year-over-year changes since 2020:

Note this is just one bottom-line, real-world result of the Federal Reserve’s

Here is the bottom line result of this mess, which results from the Fed raising rates (which they needed to do to ease red-hot inflation), as laid out nicely in a tweet by Charlie Bilello:

 

Bilello followed up with an article that explained the rest of the bad news in the housing market:

While prices are starting to move lower (1.7% YoY decline is the largest since 2012), it’s not nearly enough to make a difference.

Supply remains constrained as many would-be sellers simply can’t afford to move. Two-thirds of mortgages have an interest rate below 4% (vs. 6.4% rate today), and most of the buyers from the last few years could not afford the house they are living in if they had to buy them at current rates/prices.

The result: a standstill in the housing market with existing home sales down 23% year-over-year, the 20th consecutive YoY decline. That’s the longest down streak since 2007-09. [emphasis added]

Remember when I said housing was a bellwether, a leading economic indicator? Here are a few reasons why:

  • Buying a home is a fundamentally optimistic endeavor – people don’t do this when they can’t afford it, or expect rough times ahead
  • Construction generally is a $1.6 trillion sector of the economy (about 5% of GDP)
  • Nearly 4 million businesses employ about 8 million people (some 5% of the total workforce)
  • 65% of Americans own homes, significantly more than those who have any retirement savings at all (just 50% are saving for the future)
  • To reiterate, the housing market is a $45 trillion asset

Like any other asset inflated by the Fed’s response to the pandemic panic, the housing market is in a tight spot. The reduction in sales and price stagnation (along with the fall in new home starts) point to an economic downturn in the very near future.

And that will be bad news for everyone, not just those who saddled themselves with a 7.1% 30-year mortgage on a home with a declining value…

Real estate isn’t the only real asset

There are a few assets you can generally rely on to resist the corrosive effects of inflation.

However, some inflation-resistant assets (in this case, homes) are much more economically sensitive than others. As I’ve just explained, housing is so extremely economically sensitive you can actually use it to forecast economic trouble ahead.

Other “real” assets include Birch Gold’s specialty, physical precious metals. Gold isn’t just inflation-resistant, it’s the historic safe haven asset of choice during periods of economic crisis.

If I’m right about the housing market, and this time around things really are worse than the last housing bubble that destroyed so many dreams, now is the time to consider your finances could survive a repeat of the Great Financial Crisis.

Take a few minutes right now to learn more about the benefits of owning physical precious metals. About those might be the best thing you can do to protect your savings against both red-hot inflation and an economic downturn.

With global tensions spiking, thousands of Americans are moving their IRA or 401(k) into an IRA backed by physical gold. Now, thanks to a little-known IRS Tax Law, you can too. Learn how with a free info kit on gold from Birch Gold Group. It reveals how physical precious metals can protect your savings, and how to open a Gold IRA. Click here to get your free Info Kit on Gold.

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19 Comments
Iska Waran
Iska Waran
May 28, 2023 6:43 pm

At least with real estate there’s zero chance you’ll discover that it’s really tungsten with a thin veneer of gold.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Iska Waran
May 28, 2023 7:04 pm

I have a green beret friend who is still convinced that he guarded significant quantities of actual gold at Fort Knox.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  Iska Waran
May 28, 2023 7:31 pm

In reality, the government owns your house and can confiscate it any time they want, so you really rent it from the them.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Iska Waran
May 28, 2023 7:39 pm

Not so fast. I remember the late 1980s early 1990s in the Vancouver BC area.

Many new condo developments that were thrown together crap, with inadequate waterproofing, in a rainforest region.

People bought high end places then were hit with emergency repair assessments by their HOA 1-2 years later, to fix the leak/rot defects. Sometimes ~1/4 of the purchase price.

Due diligence. Everyone is trying to scam you.

Anonymous law of the universe.

well_Inever
well_Inever
  Anonymous
May 29, 2023 6:11 am

Due diligence. Everyone is trying to scam you. You got that right.

i forget
i forget
  Iska Waran
May 29, 2023 11:59 am

tonguegruent boxes … little boxes … on the shillside … made of ticky-tack …

comment image

Two if by sea.
Two if by sea.
May 28, 2023 8:30 pm

“Today’s Housing Market Looks Even Worse than 2008”

Not in Florida. Prices are criminal here and I don’t see it relenting until all the migrants here start voting in mutton heads like they do up Nawth.

TampaRed
TampaRed
  Two if by sea.
May 28, 2023 9:41 pm

2xsea,
keep your fingers crossed that they stay high —
i have a couple of houses i need to sell —

Two if by sea.
Two if by sea.
  TampaRed
May 28, 2023 10:04 pm

Dump em Red. Dump em.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
  Two if by sea.
May 28, 2023 11:15 pm

Just don’t buy tungsten with the proceeds.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
  Iska Waran
May 29, 2023 1:29 pm

Somebody thinks buying tungsten is a good idea? Tell us more. Looks like the price is running about $325 per metric ton. Anyone who sells their house and buys tungsten is probably going to need to buy another house to store the tungsten.

rhs jr
rhs jr
  Two if by sea.
May 29, 2023 10:35 am

Then there are the home insurance and property tax costs.

Jimbo
Jimbo
  Two if by sea.
May 29, 2023 9:06 pm

Not in Central Ohio, either. Boom times in the housing market here.

James
James
May 28, 2023 8:54 pm

I do not care care about a home as a carpenter(if price is right),just the acerage/will hold on buying for the moment.

Oh,have plenty of gold/silver,where that heads is a whole nother world.

TampaRed
TampaRed
  James
May 28, 2023 9:48 pm

james,
will you leave the northeast?
there are many places where land is relatively inexpensive —
construction question 4 you —
i have a single story cb house that was built in the 1950’s by an old man who did not know what he was doing —
instead of using a half block to start the bottom row he used a full block on block for every wall –there r places where the mortar has come out & you can see sunlight coming thru the cracks —
can that compromise the building or is it just an air leak that needs to be plugged ?

i forget
i forget
May 28, 2023 9:14 pm

It’s not a market.

Dr. Housing ~ “Everybody lies.”

TCS
TCS
May 29, 2023 8:31 am

Good times. Bad times. Makes no difference. People are always moving and it’s the rare few who prefer homelessness.

We’ll all keep dancing until the music stops.

A cruel accountant
A cruel accountant
May 29, 2023 10:03 am

This is an ad masquerading as an article

MASTER OF UNIVERSE
MASTER OF UNIVERSE
May 29, 2023 10:07 am

Housing is the ‘cage of every angry & hateful bird’ due to the fact that
nobody can move in a market that has zero mobility. And yes, we’re
prisoners of the central banksters who engineered this conundrum
when Nixon closed the gold window and Greenspan became chair
of the Feral Reserve NYC.

Phil Gramm said that ‘Greenspan will go down as the greatest
Feral Reserve Chairman in the history of central banking.’
Neoliberal much?

MOU