Collapsing
Bubble
by
Bill Bonner
by Bill Bonner
"I've cut the
price twice," said a dear reader of his house in Florida. "I get
plenty of people stopping by, but no one makes an offer. It's eerie.
It's as if they all suddenly knew that if they wait they'll be able
to do a lot better later on."
This morning,
we read that major new condo projects are being closed down in Washington,
DC, as well as Las Vegas and Miami. Nationwide, there are said to
be almost four million new and used houses on the market. Reports
from all over the country tell of rising inventories, slower sales,
and price-cutting.
And from other
dear readers come more worrying anecdotes:
"When you mentioned
Las Vegas real estate woes, I'd like to comment further," begins
a letter from a dear reader. "I am a Phoenix real estate agent and
March 2005 there were 5,000 houses on the market, March 2006 there
were 35,000 houses on the market. Today there are currently 40,000
houses on the market. Staggering!"
How will it
all end, we wonder. With a bang or with a whimper?
Meanwhile,
the curious fact remains: consumers are still consuming their fool
heads off. Spending and debt are still rising, despite the lag in
house sales. And in surveys of consumer attitudes, the lumpen report
vague presentiments of trouble coming, but no real fear. It is as
if they thought they were expected to appear wary. As if it would
be unseemly or lacking in gravitas to expect such fat times to roll
on forever. But, queried more closely, that is exactly what they
do think.
Susan Walker
reports from her own Elliott Wave Forecast:
"A recent national
survey of homeowners by the L.A. Times shows 'widespread
faith in the real estate market.' The worst possible scenario, that
prices would 'stay the same' over the next three years, was selected
by just 5 percent of homeowners. That total was less than the 6
percent who said they expect to see a rise of 31 percent or more.
No matter how much talk of a bubble there may be, homeowners continue
to demonstrate that they have no clue about the ramifications of
one. And this is in an environment in which prices actually are
falling! The denial runs so deep, it's not even denial anymore.
It's some kind of epic disconnect between the reality of a newly
falling housing market and an unwritten social contract that says
home prices do not fall."
"We recall
that during the late '90s a study of investor beliefs yielded the
unexpected finding that a substantial number of mutual-fund buyers
thought their money was insured by the federal government. Those
were the unsophisticated lumps, of course. The more sophisticated
lumps believed the entire market was protected by the "Greenspan
put," which meant that the Fed chairman would always come to the
rescue of a falling market with more liquidity. There was some truth
to this, but it didn't save the billions that had been dumped into
tech stocks. Greenspan came through with the liquidity, but it flowed
into housing, not dot.coms.
"It is our
view that the 'irrational exuberance' has transferred from stocks
to housing, setting up conditions for a 'housing deflation,' writes
John Rubino at 321 Gold. "We expect a serious fall-off of home construction,
sales and values, starting in 2006, and becoming very pronounced
by 2007. A glut of new houses will accumulate in the next 1224
months, causing a drop in price and construction of new units, and
setting up a serious risk of price decline (similar to the 'tech
wreck' in the stock market)."
But
now, the lumps are betting that the new men at the Federal Reserve
and U.S. Treasury, along with the president, Congress, all the ships
at sea and God himself, will make sure that they never get what
they've got coming. That is, they're betting that they'll never
have to put back in the equity they've taken out of their houses...that
there is no slip to this slope...no downside to go along with the
upside...no bear market in housing to follow the bull market.
But
there always is. It doesn't mean that house prices will suddenly
fall. There are more ways than one to balance out a housing boom
and ruin speculators; some of them homeowners would hardly notice.
House prices could stay at present levels for the next 10 years,
allowing inflation to cut them in half and slowly grind away at
speculators, whose carrying costs would rise while their assets
depreciated. Or, prices could collapse in some areas and hold steady
in others. Or, they could even continue to rise, but less fast than
consumer prices. Anything could happen.
June
14, 2006
Bill
Bonner [send
him mail] is the author, with Addison Wiggin, of Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of The 21st
Century and
Empire of Debt: The Rise Of An Epic Financial Crisis.
Copyright
© 2006 Bill Bonner
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