Saturday, June 6, 2015

FEWER HOMEOWNERS...MORE RENTERS

The U.S. homeownership rate has dropped sharply as a consequence of the excesses that led to the housing crash of 2004-2008. The chart to the right, taken from an earlier post in this blog ("Homeownership Rate...Back to the Future",http://econlives.blogspot.com/2015/05/homeownership-rateback-to-future.html), shows how the rate fell by almost five percentage points over the last decade, to its current level of 63.7%. A declining rate, however, does not necessarily imply that the actual number of homeowners also declines, since an increasing number of households could probably compensate for the lower rate, that has occurred in the past. But this is not the case currently, both the rate and the number of homeowner households has fallen.

House Prices Won't Fall They Said...But They Did Fall.
Back in 2004, who remembers?...Google of course, many thought it highly unlikely that prices would fall nationally. For instance, an economist at Wachovia Securities, swallowed by Wells Fargo since then and probably the quality of their forecasts was one reason, said that "housing prices could slide back somewhat...I don't think they will plummet." Also, Mark Gongloff a writer at the all-knowing, all-reliable CNN Money stated that "Home prices don't often fall nationwide. It last happened to new home prices in 1991, and things were considerably different then...the oversupply of homes, which stretched back to the late 80s helped sink prices, but no such oversupply exists today." So was the conventional thinking before the fall. An elementary understanding of economics would have told him there are other causes behind price fluctuations besides "oversupply."


It is well known that many of the houses sold in the first half of the last decade, both new and existing houses, were to consumers who couldn't afford them. Also, most consumers purchased them under the assumption that forever rising house prices would make those house purchases a solid investment. This proved to be not so. Nationally, home prices fell 25% between 2007 and 2011, with the biggest declines in 2008 and 2009.

The precipitous drop in house prices resulted, as we now know, in a huge number of homeowners who found themselves "under water" with their mortgages. Additionally, as the recession set in, many who lost their jobs couldn't meet the monthly house payments and this led to the foreclosure crisis- with the number of foreclosures reaching nearly 2.5 million in 2009. Foreclosures have declined over the last few years, although they still hover around half a million homes annually; this compares unfavorably with the figures before the recession when around 150,000 foreclosures were recorded per year.

All of these factors, falling house prices, dropping wealth, the number of foreclosures rising, etc. have impacted the dynamics of owning or renting a home.

Household Formations are Down

Last year, the total number of households in the U.S. reached 115.5 million, an increase of 792 thousand from 2013. Although this is a remarkable 51% increase over the prior year, the number of new households in 2014 is still far lower than the average maintained over the 40-year period from 1960 to 2000. Over those forty years, the number of households increased by an average of 1.3 million a year.
The chart to the left shows that, since the onset of the 2008-09 recession, the number of new households has averaged just under 600 thousand per year (shown by the red line), this is less than half the average maintained during the last four decades of the last century. And fewer new households implies, naturally, fewer new houses are needed.

More Renters, Fewer Homeowners
The net result is that since the onset of the housing crash, and the general economic recession that followed it, we have seen the actual number of homeowners fall, while the total number of renters has increased.
As the chart "Number of Homeowners & Renters" shows, we had by 2014 1.7 million fewer homeowners than in 2006. In contrast, the number of renters shot up dramatically by 6.4 million households. This, as can be surmised, is different from the pattern we were used to seeing in the past, when both the number of homeowners and renters increased.


Younger People Shying Away From Homeownership
Unlike previous generations, where young adults would try to purchase a home as soon as possible, some even before getting married, currently we see that a majority of them are opting for renting. There are many reasons why they are making that choice now. Among them must be the inability to get credit given the large education debt load they carry. Also, many of them are staying away from the labor force altogether- witness their declining participation in the labor market. Additionally, we can't dismiss the fact that the charm of owning a home may have faded, since homeowners can't accumulate as much real estate wealth as during the housing bubble years. The chart nearby shows that the number of homeowners under 55 years old has fallen, with the largest declines observed among two groups: 25 to 34 years and 35 to 44 years. It is only among those headed  by people over 55 years that we see homeowners rising more than renters. 

Moreover, the under 25 years set has fallen for both owners and renters. This is consistent, again, with the precipitous decline in labor participation among people in this age group. They are the ones who have moved back to their parents homes, and are living in the basement playing video games.

Implications of This Trend
We've been seeing already some of the effects of this new dynamic. For instance, multi-family housing construction has recovered faster and more robustly since the recession. While single family construction rebounded by 46% since its low point in 2009, building of multi-family units has shot up by 226%. Also, while prior to the recession between one quarter and one third of the multi-family units were built as condominiums, that is not for rent, that proportion has fallen precipitously over the last four years. We find that, since 2010,  only 8% of the multi-family housing units are built for sale, the vast majority are designed to be rental units. But the average size of those rental units is under 1100 square feet- pretty much the size prevalent in the early years of the century.

More importantly, these trends also mean that the home improvement market in the future will grow less than otherwise. Rental units are remodeled less frequently than homeowned properties and, since they are smaller than owned homes, the amount spent on remodeling is going to be smaller. Thus, in general we should expect fewer remodelings and fewer funds spent on those projects. 

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