Residential May Karl L. Guntermann Fred E. Taylor Professor of Real Estate. Adam Nowak Research Associate

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Transcription:

Residential May 2008 Karl L. Guntermann Fred E. Taylor Professor of Real Estate Adam Nowak Research Associate

The use of repeat sales is the most reliable way to estimate price changes in the housing market because the repeat sales approach eliminates the need to deal with the many issues associated with the heterogeneous nature of housing. Repeat sales can be used to measure the price change of the same housing unit over time. A large number of repeat sales over many years can be analyzed to develop a repeat sales index. In contrast, indices developed using regression analysis provide estimates of price changes over time while simultaneously attempting to control for differences in house characteristics, location, demographics and market conditions, etc. within the model. Regression analysis can and does produce meaningful estimates of price changes but the results are not as reliable as those produced using repeat sales data. An even less rigorous approach would be to simply average sale prices by zip code or some other geographic area where the mix of housing sizes and ages, etc. would be different each month. The percent changes based on medians or averages would reflect not only price changes but also differences in the sizes, ages and other characteristics of the houses sold each month. The W.P. Carey School of Business Repeat Sales Index (RSI) tracks very closely to the S&P/Case - Shiller index for Phoenix since the same methodology is employed for calculating both indices. The S&P/ Case-Shiller index has been developed for 20 metropolitan areas and is being used as a basis for trading housing futures contracts in 10 of those markets. Any differences that exist between the two indices are partly due to the use of different house transactions databases and possibly by the way the data has been cleaned prior to the calculation process. For example, the ASU-RSI database includes For Sale by Owner (FSBO) sales, which are not included in the S&P/Case-Shiller index since it uses MLS data. The S&P/Case-Shiller index is proprietary so the cleaning procedure used in connection with that index could not be completely duplicated. However, following S&P/Case-Shiller, the cleaning process used with the ASU - RSI excludes pairs where the first sale involved new construction and pairs where sales occurred within six months of each other. Sale pairs with extremely high or low annual rates of price change are excluded since at least one of the transactions may involve a data error. The same justification is used to drop sales with extremely high or low prices or prices per square foot prior to matching the sale pairs. A more detailed explanation of the data cleaning and calculation process is contained in the ASU-RSI Methodology Report. A modified cleaning procedure has been used beginning with the November 2007 data. This typically has resulted in only slight changes to the statistics, with the exception of the Central region (Phoenix) where recent declines are more pronounced. The house price data used in the S&P/Case-Shiller index starts in January 1989. Beginning with January 1990, the percent change from the same month in the previous year is reported. The ASU RSI also begins with January 1989 data so the same percent change calculation also begins in January 1990 and is reported for each month since then. There is seasonality in house price data so month to month changes may not accurately reflect changes in market conditions and would 1

cover a very short time period. Calculating a percent change from the same month in the previous year controls for whatever seasonality may be present in the data. Annual rates of change typically are thought of applying to a calendar year but in this report the annual rates that are reported would be measuring change over the preceding twelve months. The graphs contained in this report show the annual rate of change in house prices for the Phoenix metropolitan area on a monthly basis. The ten graphs cover two time periods. Five of the graphs present the price changes from January 1990 through February 2008 while the other five graphs cover the recent housing cycle beginning in January 2004. The S&P/Case-Shiller index is published only for the entire Phoenix metro area. One major advantage to the ASU-RSI is that in addition to the overall index, the metro area has been divided into five regions and an index has been calculated for each region. All repeat sales used in the metro index are included in one of the regional indices. An index has also been calculated for seven individual cities where there are a sufficient number of repeat sales for the index to be reliable. A list of the cities included in each region is in Table 1. TABLE 1 CITIES INCLUDED IN REGIONS REGION NORTHEAST NORTHWEST CITIES CAREFREE CAVE CREEK FOUNTAIN HILLS PARADISE VALLEY SCOTTSDALE EL MIRAGE GLENDALE PEORIA SUN CITY SUN CITY WEST SURPRISE YOUNGTOWN CENTRAL PHOENIX 2

SOUTHEAST SOUTHWEST APACHE JUNCTION CHANDLER GILBERT HIGLEY MESA QUEEN CREEK SUN LAKES TEMPE AVONDALE BUCKEYE GOODYEAR LITCHFIELD PARK Analysis The latest data for February 2008 reveal that house prices declined by less than 2.0 percent compared to January for all cities and most regions. The lone exception was the Southwest region, where the February decline was over 4.0 percent. The February declines are similar to those observed from December 2007 to January 2008, which followed a very steep decline from November to December 2007. In two-thirds of the regions and cities covered by the ASU-RSI, the January to February declines were smaller than for the prior month. It will be at least another month or two before it is known whether the rate of decline in house prices is leveling off or whether this is a brief plateau preceding accelerating rates of decline. The overall Phoenix index is 9.3 percent lower than it was in February 2007. On a moving twelve month basis, price changes first became negative in March 2007 and the rate of decline gradually accelerated throughout the year before stepping up to a much faster rate beginning in December. Between January 2004 and July 2006, house prices increased by more than 76 percent throughout the metro area with the peak rate of appreciation occurring from September 2004 to September 2005 at over 44.0 percent. In contrast, from the July 2006 peak through February 2008, house prices have declined almost 12.0 percent. While the total decline is small compared to earlier increases, any decline is not good news for those trying to sell or refinance their homes, especially considering the problems in the mortgage market and weakness in the national and Arizona economies. Annual rates of decline vary widely across the five regions. From February 2007 to 2008 prices declined only 2.4 percent in the Northeast but by 17.9 percent in the Southwest (Table 2). House prices in the Northwest have dropped almost as much at 16.2 percent, while they are down 11.1 percent in the Southeast and 7.5 percent in the Central (Phoenix) region. Only the Central 3

region showed a slower annual rate in February than in January (-10.0 percent). In the Northeast, annual rates of change in house prices have been essentially flat for over a year, while for the Southeast, Northwest and Southwest regions, the rates of decline have been accelerating. In the Southeast and Northwest the acceleration has been somewhat gradual except for the unusually large declines at the end of 2007. In 2008, price declines appear to be returning to the trend seen throughout most of 2007 for those two regions. The situation is noticeably worse in the Southwest. In addition to the large decline in the December 2007 data, the annual rate of decline increased to 17.9 percent in February from 14.6 percent in January. The early 1990s saw a recession and fallout from the excesses of the 1980s in the real estate market. On a twelve month basis, house prices declined from August 1990 to December 1991, a record 17 straight months. To put things in historical perspective, a comparison between current housing market conditions and those in the early 1990s for regions and cities included in the ASU-RSI is presented in Tables 2 and 3. The current weakness in the housing market is approaching the duration experienced in the early 1990s and the magnitude of the declines equals or exceeds those from the earlier period except in the Northeast region (Table 2). While all five regions showed similar dramatic increases in house prices from January 2004 to their 2006 peaks (73.5 80.6 percent), prices have fallen most on the West side. Total declines are 18.6 and 21.0 percent respectively for the Northwest and Southwest compared to 5.4 percent for the Northeast, 10.1 percent for the Central and 15.5 percent for the Southeast. The Northeast has replaced the Central region as the area best able to weather the downturn in house prices compared to the early 1990s while the Southeast has joined the west side in having the poorest performing housing markets. Unfortunately, since there is nothing in the data yet to indicate that house prices are reaching a bottom, the declines are likely to continue until fundamentals in the housing market improve and/or the turmoil in the mortgage market subsides. TABLE 2 ANNUAL AND TOTAL DECLINES IN HOUSE PRICES BY REGION EARLY 1990s VS THE PRESENT CENTRAL NORTHEAST SOUTHEAST NORTHWEST SOUTHWEST Feb. 2007-7.5 % -2.4 % -11.1 % -16.2 % -17.9 % Feb. 2008 1989 1990/92-3.2-9.7-7.0-15.3-21.2 2006 2008-10.1-5.4-15.5-18.6-21.0 4

Variations similar to those observed in the regional data are also apparent in the city data. Rates of decline in house prices from February 2007 to 2008 ranged from 2.1 percent in Scottsdale / Paradise Valley to 17.1 percent in Peoria (Table 3). Total declines for five of the seven cities are greater than occurred in the early 1990s, in some cases by a large margin, while the decline in Glendale is close to the early 1990s, making this the worst housing market on record. Only housing in Scottsdale / Paradise Valley appears to be weathering the downturn better than it did earlier with a total decline of just 5.4 percent. These results illustrate one advantage of the ASU-RSI, which is that indices calculated separately for regions and cities can demonstrate the variability of changes in house prices throughout the metropolitan area. While aggregate statistics point to declines in house prices, it is important to remember that housing cannot be analyzed as a single market. Rather, conditions are likely to vary not only by cities but also by zip codes and even neighborhoods. TABLE 3 ANNUAL AND TOTAL DECLINES IN HOUSE PRICES BY CITY EARLY 1990s VS THE PRESENT CHANDLER GLENDALE MESA PEORIA SCOTTSDALE/ SUN CITY/ SUN TEMPE PARADISE CITY WEST VALLEY Feb. 2007- -9.4 % -16.5 % -10.0 % -17.1 % -2.1% -13.7 % -8.6 % Feb. 2008 1989 1991-7.6-19.6-10.9-7.3-9.7-10.5-1.9 2006 2008-14.5-17.9-14.4-20.3-5.4-19.0-13.3 One dimension to the current housing crisis is affordability. The dramatic increase in house prices from 2004 into 2006 far outpaced increases in household incomes, which tend to rise very slowly. This disparity caused housing affordability to decline drastically. Improved affordability alone will not end the crisis but recent declines in house prices are moving the market in the right direction. An affordability index of 100 means that a household earning the median income for the area can afford to buy a median priced house at prevailing interest rates. An index value of 125 means that median income is 125 percent of the income needed to buy a median priced house while an index of 75 means just the opposite. In that case a household earning the median income has only 75 percent of the income needed to buy the same median priced house. As recently as 2003 5

the index for Phoenix was 126 while by 2006 it had declined to 74 1. The change in house prices and/or interest rates that would be needed to bring the affordability index up to 100, which is a useful benchmark, can be calculated for most cities in the ASU-RSI. The affordability index and median resale house prices for 2008, Q1 at an effective interest rate of 6.0 percent are in the top portion of Table 4. The house price associated with an index value of 100 is then calculated for each city based on estimated gross monthly household income and the effective 6.0 percent interest rate. A comparison of the two house prices is an indication of the condition of the housing market in each city and it can be related to house price changes calculated from the ASU-RSI data. For example, the affordability index for Mesa in the first quarter was 93 and the median house price was $205,000. The median price would have to decline an additional 7.1% to $191,477 for the affordability index for Mesa to equal 100. The total decline in Mesa house prices through February 2008 has been 14.4 percent (Table 3) so Mesa is roughly two-thirds of the way back to achieving parity in housing affordability. Affordability is just one aspect of the current housing problem and it must be remembered that this affordability calculation is not a forecast of how much house prices will decline in any of these cities but rather it is an illustration of the magnitude of the price declines needed to bring about a significant improvement in housing affordability. The results of the calculations for most cities are encouraging. Except for Tempe where prices would need to decline an additional 26.6 percent based on current gross monthly household income and Mesa, the other five cities have affordability indexes close to or above 100. In Chandler the median price, $242,000 is already well below the $261,062 needed for the index to equal 100. Interestingly, the decline in house prices from January to February 2008 for those five cities was typically less than 1.0 percent and for Phoenix prices actually rose 1.0 percent. The two cities with the largest monthly declines from January to February were Mesa (1.3 percent) and Tempe (2.2 percent), which is consistent with the analysis just discussed and the need for further price declines in those cities. While the trends in the ASU-RSI indicate that further declines in house prices are likely, improved affordability suggests that other factors, such as the cost and availability of mortgage financing may be bigger impediments to recovery in the housing market than the price of housing. While price declines have been and are painful to those affected, they are a necessary part of the adjustment that is occurring in the housing market and perhaps the worst is over for some areas. The bottom portion of Table 4 contains the same calculations but assumes that interest rates decline by one-half percent from the 2008 Q1 average down to 5.5 percent. To the extent that interest rates decline, house prices wouldn t have to drop as much to achieve the same level of 1 Realty Studies, Arizona State University Polytechnic Campus 6

affordability given the same level of household income. Interest rates clearly have a dramatic effect on housing affordability although for Tempe additional price declines would still be needed. Lowering interest rates to benefit the housing market is one goal of the Federal Reserve but unfortunately mortgage rates recently have not been dropping as hoped. Table 4 House Price and Interest Rates for the Affordability Index to = 100 Effective Interest Rate 6.0%* Chandler Glendale Mesa Peoria Phoenix Tempe 2008 Q1 Affordability Index* 108 97 93 102 98 79 Median Gross Monthly Household Income* $ 5,590 $ 4,310 $ 4,100 $ 5,000 $ 3,945 $ 4,060 Median Resale Price* $242,000 $ 206,465 $ 205,000 $ 230,000 $188,075 $240,000 House Price for Affordability Index to = 100 $261,062 $ 201,284 $ 191,477 $ 233,508 $184,238 $189,609 Additional Price Decline Needed -7.3% 2.6% 7.1% -1.5% 2.1% 26.6% Effective Interest Rate 5.5% Median Resale Price* $242,000 $ 206,465 $ 205,000 $ 230,000 $188,075 $240,000 House Price for Affordability Index to = 100 $275,666 $ 212,544 $ 202,188 $ 271,474 $194,544 $200,215 Additional Price Decline Needed -12.2% -2.9% 1.4% -6.7% -3.3% 19.9% * Realty Studies, Arizona State University Polytechnic Campus 7

5 Metro Phoenix Repeat Sales Index (RSI) January 1990 - February 2008 4 3 2 1 Jan-90 Jul-90 Jan-91 Jul-91 Jan-92 Jul-92 Jan-93 Jul-93 Jan-94 Jul-94 Jan-95 Jul-95 Jan-96 Jul-96 Jan-97 Jul-97 Jan-98 Jul-98 Jan-99 Jul-99 Jan-00 Jul-00 Jan-01 Jul-01 Jan-02 Jul-02 Jan-03 Jul-03 Jul-04 Jul-05 Jul-06 Jul-07 8

Sep-07 Nov-07 May-07 Jul-07 Mar-07 5 Metro Phoenix Repeat Sales Index (RSI) January 2004 - February 2008 4 3 2 1 Mar-04 May-04 Jul-04 Sep-04 Nov-04 Mar-05 May-05 Jul-05 Sep-05 Nov-05 Mar-06 May-06 Jul-06 Sep-06 Nov-06 9

5 Regional Repeat Sales Index (RSI) January 1990 - February 2008 4 3 2 1 Jan-90 Jul-90 Jan-91 Jul-91 Jan-92 Jul-92 Jan-93 Jul-93 Jan-94 Jul-94 Jan-95 Jul-95 Jan-96 Jul-96 Jan-97 Jul-97 Jan-98 Jul-98 Jan-99 Jul-99 Jan-00 Jul-00 Jan-01 Jul-01 Jan-02 Jul-02 Jan-03 Jul-03 Jul-04 Jul-05 Jul-06 Jul-07 10 Central Northeast Southeast Northwest Southwest Metro Area

5 Regional Repeat Sales Index (RSI) January 2004 - February 2008 4 3 2 1 Central Northeast Southeast Northwest Southwest Metro Area Mar-04 May-04 Jul-04 Sep-04 Nov-04 Mar-05 May-05 Jul-05 Sep-05 Nov-05 11 Mar-06 May-06 Jul-06 Sep-06 Nov-06 Mar-07 May-07 Jul-07 Sep-07 Nov-07

5 Chandler, Mesa, & Tempe Repeat Sales Index (RSI) January 1990 - February 2008 4 3 2 1 Chandler Mesa Tempe Metro Area Jan-90 Jan-91 Jan-92 Jan-93 Jan-94 Jan-95 Jan-96 Jan-97 Jan-98 Jan-99 Jan-00 Jan-01 Jan-02 Jan-03 12

5 Chandler, Mesa & Tempe Repeat Sales Index (RSI) January 2004 - February 2008 4 3 2 1 Chandler Mesa Tempe Metro Area Mar-04 May-04 Jul-04 Sep-04 Nov-04 Mar-05 May-05 Jul-05 Sep-05 Nov-05 13 Mar-06 May-06 Jul-06 Sep-06 Nov-06 Mar-07 May-07 Jul-07 Sep-07 Nov-07

5 Glendale, Peoria, & Sun City/Sun City West Repeat Sales Index (RSI) January 1990 - February 2008 4 3 2 1 Glendale Peoria Sun City/Sun City West Metro Area Jan-90-3 Jan-91 Jan-92 Jan-93 Jan-94 Jan-95 Jan-96 Jan-97 Jan-98 Jan-99 Jan-00 Jan-01 Jan-02 Jan-03 14

5 Glendale, Peoria, & Sun City/Sun City West Repeat Sales Index (RSI) January 2004 - February 2008 4 3 2 1 Glendale Peoria Mar-04 May-04 Jul-04 Sun City/Sun City West Metro Area Sep-04 Nov-04 Mar-05 May-05 Jul-05 Sep-05 Nov-05 15 Mar-06 May-06 Jul-06 Sep-06 Nov-06 Mar-07 May-07 Jul-07 Sep-07 Nov-07

5 Scottsdale/Paradise Valley, & Phoenix Repeat Sales Index (RSI) January 1990 - February 2008 4 3 2 1 Jul-04 Jan-90 Jul-90 Jan-91 Jul-91 Jan-92 Jul-92 Jan-93 Jul-93 Jan-94 Jul-94 Jan-95 Jul-95 Jan-96 Jul-96 Jan-97 Jul-97 Jan-98 Jul-98 Jan-99 Jul-99 Jan-00 Jul-00 Jan-01 Jul-01 Jan-02 Jul-02 Jan-03 Jul-03 Jul-05 Jul-06 Jul-07 Scottsdale/PV Metro Area Phoenix 16

5 Scottsdale/Paradise Valley, & Phoenix Repeat Sales Index (RSI) January 2004 - February 2008 4 3 2 1 Scottsdale/PV Phoenix Metro Area Mar-04 May-04 Jul-04 Sep-04 Nov-04 Mar-05 May-05 Jul-05 Sep-05 Nov-05 17 Mar-06 May-06 Jul-06 Sep-06 Nov-06 Mar-07 May-07 Jul-07 Sep-07 Nov-07