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Boston Bubble Brief: The Real Story for MA - Sep 2009

 
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PostPosted: Fri Oct 30, 2009 1:21 am GMT    Post subject: Boston Bubble Brief: The Real Story for MA - Sep 2009 Reply with quote

This is a brief report on what the data for the housing market in Massachusetts looks like in real terms. Market data is typically reported in nominal terms which can be misleading because it combines changes in housing values with changes in the value of the dollar. Correcting for inflation removes changes in the dollar as a factor and gives a more accurate picture of how housing values have changed. This report is based on the published data of the Massachusetts Association of Realtors, though it should be noted that the S&P/Case-Shiller Index is a superior data source.

The Massachusetts Association of Realtors released their data for September 2009 on Tuesday, October 27th. While the raw prices were provided in nominal terms, for this report they have been adjusted for inflation using the CPI Northeast Urban numbers available at http://www.bls.gov/cpi/ Adjusting for inflation produced the data represented by the graphs below. Prices for January 2003 and earlier have been estimated by applying the earliest reported median from The MAR, February 2003, against the S&P/Case-Shiller Index for the Boston area. Suggestions for improving this estimate are welcome.

Full Price History



Change in Median Price From One Year Earlier, February 2004 - September 2009

Seasonal variations are removed by comparing prices from the same month in the prior year.



Some observations:

  • The real decline from September 2008 to September 2009 was 1.00%
  • For the sixth month in a row, the year over year decline was above the normal range, with April being the first time since August 2007 that the decline has been one standard deviation or more above the moving average. This continues the abrupt departure from ever deepening declines which began in April and suggests that declines are moderating, albeit not necessarily due to sustainable influences.
  • Real prices are once again lower than the same month in any other year in the time period covered by The MAR.
  • Prices are now 30.80% below the peak set in June 2005. This is the result of a 22.41% decline in nominal housing prices and a 10.81% decline in the purchasing power of the dollar.
  • The cumulative price decline from the beginning (Feb 2003) is 14.12%, which is an annualized decline of 2.29%.
  • The price has dipped back below the estimate for the same month in 2001 after having briefly risen above it for three months.


Inflation has played a large part in this year's spring bounce. The year over year change in the CPI-NU was actually negative for the last six months, making the real decline in housing prices smaller than what has been reported by the media. This effect will be temporary, though, as the year over year decline in consumer prices is the result of a deflationary spike from last fall which has already run its course, as can be seen from the following graphs:





The temporary $8,000 US tax credit for home buyers has also likely distorted this year's spring and summer selling seasons. At the most basic level, it plausibly added $8,000 to the price of homes near the Massachusetts median. However, its side effects may have been just as important, if not more so, in producing the appearance of a particularly large spring bounce. The tax credit in conjunction with the Massachusetts program to facilitate its use as a down payment surely expanded the pool of potential buyers to people who would have otherwise not been able to buy due to an insufficient down payment. In fact, the increased demand from people rushing to not miss out on $8,000 in savings could very well have (artificially) bid prices up by quite a bid more than $8,000 because of all the extra buyers.

The tax credit also probably caused a time shift of home purchases which would have been made anyway, pulling demand from the beginning of 2009 as well as next year and swelling demand this spring, summer, and fall. Depressed demand in the winter would have lowered prices there and increased demand in the spring and summer would have increased prices there, and so the apparent rise from winter to summer is artificially steepened. Finally, those who purchased before the credit took affect may have mentally discounted their offer prices to make up for the credit they would be missing.

Strong evidence for this hypothesis can be seen in the tiered S&P/Case-Shiller Index for Boston. The bounce is very pronounced in the low tier, where the credit would have the most impact, and practically absent in the high tier, where it would be a smaller percentage of the price and where many buyers would presumably be disqualified from the credit due to the associated income limits.





In fact, the Massachusetts Association of Realtors attributed the recent "improvement" in prices (i.e., declines that aren't as steep usual) and increase in sales volume to the home buyer tax credit:
Quote:

"We really feel that the past three months of positive home sales are a result of the $8,000 tax credit and its impending expiration date," said MAR President Gary Rogers, a broker with RE/MAX First Realty in Waltham. "Despite this bump, we are concerned that it will take longer and be more difficult for the market to stabilize without extending the Federal tax credit for homebuyers past the December 1 deadline."

In essence, recent data does not demonstrate stabilization, it does not demonstrate a bottom, it only reflects government life support. If the market had truly hit bottom, there would be no need for continued government intervention. (Which isn't to say that there is a "need" for it pre-bottom either, just that calls for help with "stabilization" are pointless if stabilization already exists.) While the begging of such industry groups may end up working to extend and expand the expensive and fraud riddled pork, it may produce diminishing returns once the year over year numbers no longer reflect increasing intervention and because many purchases have already been time shifted.

The S&P/Case-Shiller Index for Boston is likely superior to the data above as it corrects for many flaws that are inherent when using only the median price. The S&P/Case-Shiller Index also has the advantage that futures contracts can be traded against it, thereby offering an unbiased insight into where housing prices are expected to be in the future. It also has more extensive historical data available. The MAR data was used for this report mainly out of inertia and might be replaced with the S&P/Case-Shiller Index in future reports.

As usual, please do try this at home. Double checking of the math used to construct the above graphs and analysis is strongly encouraged in order to help ferret out any errors. The data was derived from the following sources:

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The latest version of this report can be found at http://www.bostonbubble.com/latest.php?id=ma_inflation

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