In December, new-home sales fell 7.6 percent from the previous month, to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 342,000, according to the Commerce Department. Sales were down 8.6 percent compared with the same period a year earlier.Here's new home sales in a chart:
The key thing to note here is the bottom, darkest line: while delinquencies and initiated foreclosures have been rising, there's a limit to how many foreclosures can actually be completed, and that limit seems if anything to be falling. What this says to me is that while we aren't going to see a wave of foreclosures, we are going to see a large and more or less constant number of foreclosures for the foreseeable future -- with all the gratuitous value destruction that implies.I think that's exactly right. And the modifications aren't working for two reasons. First, many troubled homeowners now have no income stream, so there's no payment amount they can currently afford. But even for those who still have a job, banks can only lower the interest rate so much or extend the term so long. At some point, you would have to lower the principal, which banks are quite uncomfortable doing. Banks don't want to lower principal amounts for two reasons. First, it's logistically difficult when these loans are part of a securitization. But possibly more importantly, they can't stomach lots of mortgage losses at once. By prolonging the agony, at least they can absorb those losses more slowly, as borrowers re-default or remain in a defaulted home for a period of months or years. This should make for a very slow-to-recover housing market. That initial jump in demand we saw last spring, summer and fall probably had more to do with government incentives pulling demand forward than a true housing rebound. Recent data indicates even that may be exhausted. Meanwhile, credit is becoming harder to get for potential home buyers. The housing inventory probably can't shrink much, because banks can only hold onto these defaulted homes for so long before having to foreclose. I take this to all indicate that housing appreciation, on average, should remain very low, if positive, over the next several years. Looking at the chart above, I can't see any reason to believe that foreclosures will decline dramatically for years. I don't know how a housing market recovers if that's the case.
This article available online at:
http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2010/01/a-pessimistic-housing-market-outlook/34707/
