Select date

May 2024
Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun

Global Housing Bubble Is Popping. Here Comes The “Reverse Wealth Effect”

4-8-2018 < SGT Report 170 606 words
 

by John Rubino, Dollar Collapse:


Just a few months ago, real estate was on fire. Prices were blowing past records set during the previous decade’s housing bubble as desperate buyers bought whatever was available at above the asking price while homeowners, confident that prices would keep rising, held out for the next big pop to sell. Notice on the following chart how the ascent steepens at the beginning of this year.



home prices wealth effect


Then, as if someone flipped a switch, the trend shifted into reverse. Not just in the US but nearly everywhere. This list of recent headlines tells the tale:


Housing demand sees biggest drop in more than 2 years


Hamptons property sales slow as caution spreads to the wealthy



Home Prices Are Falling in One of America’s Richest Suburbs


First Time Ever, More Chinese sellers than buyers


Vancouver Suffers Its Worst July for Home Sales Since 2000


Record Drop in Foreigners Buying U.S. Homes


Australian home prices take biggest dip since 2011


The End of the Global Housing Boom


Manhattan Real Estate: Prices Plummet, Sales Tank


What’s happening and why is it happening now?
Several things came together pretty much simultaneously to turn houses from must-have-at-any-price necessities into completely optional and maybe not even desirable: First, prices rose beyond the reach of all but the seriously affluent. The gap between the price of the average home and the size of the mortgage the average local buyer can afford has been rising for years, but recently in the hottest markets it has become a chasm. Meanwhile, mortgage rates have started to rise, increasing the monthly payment on a given house dramatically.


mortgage rates wealth effect


If you live in San Francisco or Sydney or Vancouver, chances are you can’t afford to buy a decent house – not even close. And if you can’t you don’t.


Second, the eruption of trade wars between the US, China and Europe has made foreign houses less straightforward for Chinese and Russian millionaires. As a result, fewer of them are making all-cash, price-is-no-object offers on overseas trophy properties.


The reverse wealth effect should terrify holders of stocks and bonds
For the past several decades it’s been the explicit policy of governments and central banks to use low interest rates and more recently direct purchases of stocks and bonds to push up the price of financial assets. The goal was to make holders of those assets feel rich and smart and therefore more inclined to borrow and spend on frivolous stuff that would boost GDP. This is called the wealth effect and it’s been firing on all cylinders in the age of QE and ZIRP. But all that borrowing – by individuals to buy houses (and SUVs and 70-inch flat-screens), corporations to buy back their stock – and buy out each other – at record high prices, and governments to build unnecessary roads and bridges and invade each other – has left a lot of debt lying around that has to be paid off with future cash flow.


Read More @ DollarCollapse.com



Print