US Housing Contribution To GDP Lowest In Post War Era, Zillow report reveals negative equity permanent fixture, Supply hangover lackluster demand and reluctant lenders

US Housing Contribution To GDP Lowest In Post War Era, Zillow report reveals negative equity permanent fixture, Supply hangover lackluster demand and reluctant lenders
From Zero Hedge March 27, 2015.
“Housing Contribution To US GDP Lowest In Post-War Era”
“In “Underwater Homeowners Here To Stay” we highlighted a report from Zillow which showed that negative equity has now become a permanent fixture of the US housing market. The report also showed that the percentage of homeowners who are underwater was flat from Q314 to Q414, breaking a string of 10 consecutive quarters of declines. We also recently noted that a completely ridiculous new home sales print that defied all logic notwithstanding, housing data, including starts and existing home sales, has come in below expectations. On a side note, home price appreciation has outpaced wage growth at a rate of 13:1, to which we would add:
Of course, the biggest determinant of home price appreciation over the past 2 years has nothing to do with US consumers, or household formation, as confirmed by the collapse in first-time homebuyers or the unprecedented depression in new mortgage origination, and everything to do with what we first suggested is one of the main drivers of the US housing bubble – foreigners parking their illegally procured cash in the US and evading taxes, now that US housing, with the NAR’s anti-money laundering exemption blessing, is the new normal’s Swiss Bank Account. That and flipping homes from one “all-cash” buyer to another “all-cash” buyer in hopes of a quick capital appreciation and the constant presence of the proverbial dumb money.
Against this backdrop, Deutsche Bank is out predicting that a sluggish US housing market is likely to impact the supply of MBS going forward. As DB notes, housing isn’t the GDP contributor it once was and not by a long shot. Not only that, but when it comes to recoveries, the housing market’s GDP contribution was 7 times below its post WW2 average in year one and has fared even worse since.”
“And demand isn’t looking so hot either:
Demand has likely played a part in slow housing, too, starting with owners that bought their homes in the last decade. Thanks to a 38% drop in home prices nationally from 2006 to 2012, according to Case-Shiller, a lot of those owners walked out the front door without any equity and without the ability to reenter the market as buyers. This has almost certainly contributed to the drop in rental unit vacancies from 10.6% in mid-2009 to 7.0% today. As for potential new owners, Americans, even before the crisis, started moving into their own place at a much slower pace than the long-term average of 1.2 million new households a year, that is, until recently. Demand from former and potential new owners has been soft.
Even in the best case scenario is which supply falls and demand rises, banks’ reluctance to lend could end up hobbling the market for the foreseeable future. ”
“So there is your housing recovery in a nutshell: supply hangover, lackluster demand, and reluctant lenders all coalescing in a housing market whose contribution to US economic growth is virtually nonexistent. “
Related News

NC unemployment rate big lie, BLS and NC commerce dept report 5.4 percent March 2015, Charlotte observer media repeat lie, No mention of 4.5 percent plummet in participation rate
NC unemployment rate big lie, BLS and NC commerce dept report 5.4 percent March 2015,Read More

Obama Charlotte NC visit April 15, 2015, Administration’s work on the economy, Citizen Wells exposes real economy and Obama jobs, White Americans and young decimated
Obama Charlotte NC visit April 15, 2015, Administration’s work on the economy, Citizen Wells exposesRead More