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U.S. new-home prices plunging at fastest pace in 36 years

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  • U.S. new-home prices plunging at fastest pace in 36 years

    U.S. new-home prices plunging at fastest pace in 36 years
    October 26, 2006 (Rex Nutting - MarketWatch)

    The median sales price of a new home fell 9.7% in the 12 months ending in September, the fastest price decline in nearly 36 years, the government said Thursday. The government reported that sales of new homes unexpectedly rose 5.3% in September to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.075 million, the most in three months and well above the 1.05 million expected by economists. New-home sales are down 14.2% in the past year. Inventories of unsold homes fell 1.9% to 557,000, representing a 6.4-month supply at the September sales pace. It's the second consecutive decline in inventories. The inventory peaked at 7.2 months in July. Inventories are up 14.4% in the past year.

    AntiSpin: Phrases like, "sales of new homes unexpectedly rose 5.3% in September," raise the question: Unexpected by whom? By "most economists," is the usual answer. Reads like the famous Trident gum TV ad that started running in the 1950s: "Nine of ten dentists recommended Trident for their patients who chew gum." Stan Freberg parodied those ads in the 1960s with a commercial he made for Chun King Chinese food. The voice-over proclaimed, "Nine out of ten doctors recommended Chun King Chinese food." The camera then panned to nine Chinese and one Anglo doctor.

    The way housing busts happen is not exactly a mystery. They occur as a series of self-reinforcing deflationary waves. The process is non-linear. Inventories rise, then price pressures rise, then transaction volumes fall, then sales volumes rise again–although not to previous levels–as prices decline, then inventories rise again, price pressures increase further, and so on. If unemployment rises, price pressures increase proportionately.

    If I can figure out how they're going to start (seize up then slow decline), how they're going to evolve (revert to the mean) and when they're going to happen
    (starting in mid 2005), you'd think nine out of ten economists could, too. How about recession predictions?

    Last week, nine out of ten economists for The Conference Board agreed that the US economy is headed for a slowdown but no recession, and issued a report stating, "Indicators point to slow growth ahead in the U.S., but not a recession."
    In early 2001, nine of out ten professional economists were, as today, predicting a slowdown, not a recession. In January 2001, my analysis came to a different conclusion–that "The Post-Bubble Recession has Arrived." This analysis assumed a recession, and instead focused on trying to predict the character of the recession, what policy responses were available and were likely to be taken, and the potential impact and effectiveness of those policies.

    Later, the post-mortems on the nine-out-of-ten economists' predictions read like this:
    "The 2001 recession differed from other recent recessions in its cause, severity, and scope. This paper documents the performance of professional forecasters and forecasts based on leading indicators as the recession unfolded. Professional forecasters found this recession a difficult one to forecast. A few leading indicators (stock prices, term spreads, unemployment claims) predicted that growth would slow, but none predicted the sharp economic slowdown. Several previously reliable leading indicators (housing starts, orders for new capital equipment, consumer sentiment) provided no early warning signals. When combined, the leading indicator performed somewhat better than a benchmark autoregressive forecasting model."

    HOW DID LEADING INDICATOR FORECASTS DO DURING THE 2001 RECESSION? (pdf), James H. Stock, Department of Economics, Harvard University and the National Bureau of Economic Research
    Like weather forecasters who stay glued to computer screens that display the results of models that predict sunshine when it's already raining, nine out of ten professional economists neglect to stick their head out the window to see what's actually going on.

    My initial prediction was for the last recession to start in Q4 2000. According to the NBER business cycle dating committee, the United States entered recession in March 2001. I was off by a quarter or two, and while some of the predictions about the character of the recession came true, others did not.

    With economic storm clouds on the horizon, it's time for me to weigh in with a new recession prediction. I learned a few things from my last effort back in 2000. Next week I will issue my forecast for our next US recession, in 2007.
    Last edited by EJ; October 26, 2006, 12:12 PM.

  • #2
    Re: U.S. new-home prices plunging at fastest pace in 36 years

    Originally posted by ej
    Next week I will issue my forecast for our next US recession.


    it's probably a bad sign that i find myself looking forward to bad news.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: U.S. new-home prices plunging at fastest pace in 36 years

      I predicted November 2006 in a poll last October. I was obviously early. But for the counter argument, read this from Mr. 15/15* hoping to be Mr. 16/16*

      Bill Miller of LeggMason Value Trust says he's inbetween bullish and very bullish

      It's when I read stuff like this that I start rooting real hard for bad news. I can't believe he said some of the stuff he said in that letter to shareholders. Here's a sampling:
      U.S. economic fundamentals are solid and notable excesses are absent. Earnings growth continues apace, as does merger and acquisition activity, and record corporate buybacks. Managements continue to be disciplined in capital spending without being miserly. Balance sheets are strong. Interest rates and inflation remain subdued, and the recent pullback in oil prices removes a source of inflationary pressure. The Fed is vigilant but not hostile. Most importantly, valuations are not demanding and the U.S. stock market remains undervalued in my opinion.


      How's that for some outlandish contrary opinion?

      * - years in a row beating his benchmark, the S&P500, which is nothing to brag about when your negative return is less negative than the banchmark, it's still negative, which his was during the cyclical bear years.
      It's all fun and games until someone loses an eye!

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: U.S. new-home prices plunging at fastest pace in 36 years

        Originally posted by Uncle Jack
        I predicted November 2006 in a poll last October. I was obviously early. But for the counter argument, read this from Mr. 15/15* hoping to be Mr. 16/16*

        Bill Miller of LeggMason Value Trust says he's inbetween bullish and very bullish

        It's when I read stuff like this that I start rooting real hard for bad news. I can't believe he said some of the stuff he said in that letter to shareholders. Here's a sampling:
        U.S. economic fundamentals are solid and notable excesses are absent. Earnings growth continues apace, as does merger and acquisition activity, and record corporate buybacks. Managements continue to be disciplined in capital spending without being miserly. Balance sheets are strong. Interest rates and inflation remain subdued, and the recent pullback in oil prices removes a source of inflationary pressure. The Fed is vigilant but not hostile. Most importantly, valuations are not demanding and the U.S. stock market remains undervalued in my opinion.
        How's that for some outlandish contrary opinion?

        * - years in a row beating his benchmark, the S&P500, which is nothing to brag about when your negative return is less negative than the banchmark, it's still negative, which his was during the cyclical bear years.
        The markets have gone up since June 13 despite any and all arguments as to why they should not. That is over 4 months, during which the SPX is up 10.59%, DJI up13.61%, NASDAQ UP 17.75%, NDX up 20.12% and RUT up 15.49% (I presume my data are correct, check it yourself). Now unless Bill Miller just turned bullish, he may have gained a lot more than I have in being bearish in these past 4 months. The market may turn to mush tomorrow, but right now it is not looking badly.
        Last edited by Jim Nickerson; October 26, 2006, 05:52 PM.
        Jim 69 y/o

        "...Texans...the lowest form of white man there is." Robert Duvall, as Al Sieber, in "Geronimo." (see "Location" for examples.)

        Dedicated to the idea that all people deserve a chance for a healthy productive life. B&M Gates Fdn.

        Good judgement comes from experience; experience comes from bad judgement. Unknown.

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        • #5
          Re: U.S. new-home prices plunging at fastest pace in 36 years

          The media almost totally ignored this bombshell price plunge report, and hence economists from the "nine out of ten" were still, today, issuing calls like "More evidence that housing may be stabilizing".

          I wouldn't believe it if I hadn't just seen it.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: U.S. new-home prices plunging at fastest pace in 36 years

            People tend to ignore unpleasant things/thoughts and focus on what they want to believe is true. Geeze, can we just pass around a tank of nitrous to all our good friends at CNBC
            I one day will run with the big dogs in the world currency markets, and stick it to the man

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: U.S. new-home prices plunging at fastest

              I'm glad we are finally on the down side of the Real Estate Bubble.

              I'm saddend that the few friends and relatives I offered my advice to stay out of Real Estate ignored my advice.

              I'm glad that my I'm no longer considered a "NUT JOB" for reminding people that the Emperor (The Real Estate Market) has no clothes.

              Ultimately, I'm saddend the chaos this Real Estate down turn will cause in peoples lives.

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