PHOTO: The housing market will suffer. Bloomberg
The coronavirus pandemic will cause many cash-strapped Americans to sell their homes, flooding the market with excess supply.
A U.S. housing crisis is coming and although it won’t be anything like the last one, that won’t make it any less painful. Even though there has been no rampant speculation or subprime mortgage fraud, housing is still overvalued. And the dearth of inventory that’s plagued the current cycle will reverse in violent fashion once the worst of the virus has passed as financially strapped homeowners seek to raise cash. And as affordability collapses with fewer buyers eligible to buy a home, the only way to rectify the mismatch between supply and demand will be via declining prices.
A $1.3 Trillion U.S. Housing Market Crash Is Imminent, and Inevitable
Home prices dropped about 35% between mid-2006 and early 2009 in the first nationwide decline since the Great Depression as measured by the S&P/Case-Shiller home price index. They have since recovered, and are now at 117% of their prior peak level in 2006. Home prices historically meandered in a range of three to four times median incomes, jumping to 5.1 times in December 2005 before collapsing. The ratio is now at 4.4 times, a level that was unprecedented prior to June 2004.
READ MORE VIA BLOOMBERG
TOP VIEWED STORIES & PAGES
- Our Latest Thoughts On Property| Updated April 2020
- Aerial photos reveal Playboy mansion’s massive face-lift
- A step-by-step guide to using the coronavirus crisis to slash your rent by 50%
- NO NEED FOR PROPERTY PANIC: SEVEN WAYS KIWIS CAN MANAGE THEIR HOLDINGS THROUGH THE LOCKDOWN AND DOWNTURN
- Covid-19: how bad will it be for the economy? | The Economist
- Up to a third of mortgage holders don’t have a buffer for virus downturn | AUSTRALIA
- CELEBRITY: Ellen DeGeneres and wife Portia de Rossi purchase a sprawling Beverly Hills mansion
- REINZ reveals most affordable Auckland suburbs for first time buyers to be close to the City