2009 Real Estate Forecast: Troubles
Spread
USA (By Prashant Gopal, Business Week)
December 25, 2008 2008 was the year
that subprime borrowers and speculators
got hurt by the real estate crisis.
Wealthier neighborhoods that avoided
subprime borrowing will be Hurt in 2009
and 2009 could be when everyone else
gets hit.
Until now, the nation's most serious
home price declines have been in
low-cost markets that were dominated by
subprime mortgages, and in overbuilt
markets such as Florida, California, and
Las Vegas, where residential values are
sliding fast toward pre-housing boom
levels.
The Commerce Dept. reported Dec. 23 that
November new-home sales in the U.S. fell
to their lowest level in 17 years, down
35.3% compared with November 2007. And
the outlook is even bleaker. The same
day, Credit Suisse (CS) forecast that
more than 8 million homes will go into
foreclosure over the next four years, or
approximately 16% of all U.S. households
with mortgages.
That's because the big story in 2009
could be that, with the deepening
recession and mounting job losses,
serious housing troubles could infect
wealthier communities and markets that
were just beginning to stabilize this
summer before the bankruptcy of Lehman
Brothers on Sept. 15 sparked the most
serious financial turmoil in decades. In
fact, according to online real estate
research firm HousingPredictor.com,
based in Destin, Fla., housing prices
nationwide will fall 12.5% next year,
compared with an estimated 11.1% this
year.
Housing and mortgage problems pushed the
nation into a recession that could now
amplify, draw out, and expand the reach
of the housing declines.
Manhattan Hit, Too
Take Manhattan, for example, where condo
and co-op prices soared years after
housing bubbles in most other major
cities popped. New York City's real
estate market was bolstered by residents
who were still earning sky-high Wall
Street bonuses and by a weak dollar that
attracted overseas bargain hunters.
Now that the dollar has strengthened,
the economic woes have spread to
potential New York home buyers across
the globe, and thousands of New York
financial professionals are collecting
severance. Manhattan apartment prices,
as a result, have dropped as much as 20%
since the summer, said Jonathan Miller,
president and chief executive officer of
real estate appraisal firm Miller
Samuel. Miller's analysis is based on
contracts signed in recent months,
rather than actual closings.
"Mid-september was a milestone," Miller
said. "That's where you saw a pronounced
slowdown in transaction volume."
HousingPredictor.com is projecting a
19.4% decline in Manhattan home prices
in 2009. And Moody's Economy.com is
predicting that condo prices in New York
City, Northern New Jersey, and
Westchester County will fall 29% by the
fourth quarter of next year.
"Nationally, we think this recession is
going to be worse than anything we've
seen in 40 years," said Marisa DiNatale,
senior economist for Moody's Economy.com.
"If the economy gets that bad, then you
will start to see foreclosures in
Manhattan as well."
Smaller Declines
On the other hand, the speculative Las
Vegas, Arizona, California, and Florida
markets, which have already seen annual
home-price declines of up to 30%, could
see slightly smaller declines simply
because values have already fallen so
much, according to Mike Colpitts, editor
of HousingPredictor.com.
Some Florida markets, including Naples,
Orlando, and Tampa, are already seeing
declines moderate a bit, but problems in
other Florida markets, such as Miami,
continue to get worse, Colpitts said.
Few areas across the country will likely
escape the recession and the
corresponding impact on the real estate
market, housing experts say. Another
wave of foreclosures could be triggered
next year as a flood of Alt-A and option
adjustable-rate mortgages, which were
given to people with decent credit,
begin to recast. Most of the option ARMs,
which allow borrowers to make minimum
payments that don't even cover the
accrued interest, are concentrated in
already battered California, Florida,
and Las Vegas.
Option ARMs originating in 2006 make up
about $140 billion of the $350 billion
of outstanding option ARMs, and 45% to
50% of them are expected to default,
according to an analysis this past
summer by Lehman Brothers. The 2007
option ARMs, which were originated just
as home prices began falling, were
expected to perform similarly badly.
Lost Jobs
Problems in other states could have less
to do with risky mortgages and more to
do with job losses. The impact of
unemployment on the real estate market
and the larger economy are already on
display in hard-hit manufacturing cities
such as Gary, Ind., and Detroit.
Alabama, Arkansas, Atlanta, Michigan,
and Ohio could see problems next year,
Colpitts said.
"We're in the middle of the game here,"
said Joseph Seneca, professor of
economics at Rutgers University in New
Jersey. "There's significant further
unwinding to come
. We're in a downward
spiral with job losses that is
reinforcing the weakness in the consumer
markets, particularly in the largest
investment the consumer makes, in his
home."
Seneca said the government's aggressive
policies to stabilize housing by
injecting liquidity in banks, lowering
interest rates, tax stimulus packages,
and other efforts will help. But the
downward cycle will end only when prices
fall far enough that they attract large
numbers of buyers.
The nation's energy-producing states,
such as North Dakota, South Dakota,
Oklahoma, Alaska, and Montana, could be
economic bright spots next year. Despite
falling oil and natural gas prices,
those industries remain robust.
Texas Troubles
The economy in Texas, however, is
beginning to get hit as unemployment
rises and consumer spending drops,
Colpitts said. He added that the Houston
market, which has been remarkably
stable, could drop about 8.5% next year.
Five of the six supermajor energy
companies maintain large operating bases
in Houston, including ConocoPhillips
(COP), ExxonMobil (XOM), Royal Dutch
Shell (RDS), and BP (BP). The overbuilt
San Antonio market could see a 10.2%
drop. Austin, which is a high-tech
center, could also be hurt as the
technology sector gets damaged by weak
consumer spending, he said.
And Charlotte, N.C., a major banking
center that had been one of the nation's
strongest real estate markets, could
have its own housing troubles.
Charlotte-based Bank of America (BAC)
just this month announced that it would
cut up to 35,000 jobs over the next few
years.
But a few places are poised for a
potential recovery.
The housing market in and around
Washington, D.C., which suffered greatly
in the wake of the housing bust, could
begin to recover, largely because the
nation's capital has so many
recession-proof government and defense
contracting jobs, said DiNatale of
Moody's Economy.com.
Other areas, such as the Boston area,
San Diego, and Orange County, Calif.,
are getting close to affordability
levels seen before the housing boom and
could begin to level off, said DiNatale.
She added: "A lot of this depends on the
economy over the next few months, help
from the federal government, and whether
buyers come back to the market."