Wenzlick

Written by Jim the Realtor

September 10, 2012

From seekingalpha.com:

The cover story for the September 10th weekly magazine Barron’s is on the recent surge in real estate and how the rise in property prices is no fluke. In the article by Jonathan R. Laing titled “Happy at Last,” readers are given a cautiously optimistic assessment of what has already been a well established trend in the real estate market. A distinction in this article is the confidence with which many professionals believe that the current rise in real estate is sustainable for the foreseeable future.

We agree that real estate will have a sustainable trajectory upward as we outlined in our December 10, 2010 article titled “Real Estate: The Verdict is In” (found here). We believe that the clear reversal of the indicators that we discussed at the end of 2010 has proven that the real estate market has bottomed. The following is a review of the indicators that we track that have definitively shown that the direction is up.

As can be seen in the chart below, U.S. housing starts bottomed in January 2009 and started to base over the next 2 years. Two months after our December 2010 article, housing starts began to increase at a healthy pace.

The broad basing pattern in U.S. housing starts and the relatively mild increase, as compared to the 1991 bottom, seems to indicate a more realistic view on expectations for real estate going forward.

The next chart that we find useful for determining the direction of the real estate market is the real estate loans at all commercial banks. When we published our December 2010 article, we said that the bottom had occurred in April 2010. In fact, the actual bottom took place in April 2011 as shown below.

The real estate market cannot thrive in an environment where lenders are unwilling to lend. Tracking the real estate loans by banks is instructive as to what the direction might be. Our assessment of this indication suggested that on a relative basis, the declining trend was at, or near, an end. The dramatic increase in lending since early 2011 has helped push select real estate markets higher.

Much of the research analysis that we do on the topic of real estate is based on the work of Roy Wenzlick. If there ever was a scientifically accurate approach to analyzing the real estate market, Roy Wenzlick perfected it. Anyone who read his newsletter, The Real Estate Analyst (published from 1932-1974), would have thought that Wenzlick was strictly a statistician. However, while Wenzlick was a compiler of significant amounts of data on real estate, he also believed that the market price for properties ran on a clearly defined cycle. On each chart, we have indicated Wenzlick’s last estimated low for real estate based on that cycle.

The chart below illustrates the importance of considering Wenzlick’s estimate of the real estate cycle because it isn’t the rise that we’re interested in as much as when the next decline begins and when the bottom might occur.

The real estate cycle that Roy Wenzlick adheres to pointed to a low in 1991 and a low in late 2009. In the Federal Housing Finance Agency’s House Price Index (HPI) for the nation, we can seen that 2009 was not quite the end of the decline for real estate. Knowing that all cycle analysis is a rough estimate, at best, we hedged our view to include the possibility that the bottom would occur as late as the end of 2010.

While the outlook for real estate prices appear to be up for an extended period of time, the stock price of homebuilders like Beazer Homes, Hovnanian Enterprises, Toll Brothers, DR Horton, Pulte Group, and Lennar Corp. are expected to rise and fall in anticipation of cyclical (short-term) trends. We continue to recommend considering any of these companies, including homebuilder ETFs like S&P Homebuilders, when they are within 10% of their respective 52-week lows. We believe that a revisit of the June 2012 lows will be the prices to watch for as the next buying opportunity for these stocks.

Barron’s is on the right track in terms of where the real estate market has been. However, the fact that Barron’s is favorably highlighting this trend indicates that there may be a short-term reversal in many of the widely followed indicators in the industry. This suggests that there are immediate long-term opportunities for homebuyers while real values in homebuilder stocks will arrive six to twelve months from now.

11 Comments

  1. James

    With FHA Expanded Loan Limits 742K Loam Amts with 3.5% down and rates sub 4%, you’d think we’d be doing better than we are? As long as the bazooka of stimulus is aimed directly at housing, the bottom may a little longer hold.

  2. ocrenter

    impressive chart.

    we see the builders doing very well with some of the higher end products. Davidson’s Maricel I heard is half gone already. Toll Bros have been selling their near $1 million homes in Stonebridge at about one per week.

  3. Mrs. Davis

    Remember Ben is history 2/1/14. This “boom” may never get off bottom.

  4. kompeitou

    Mark Hanson has a different outlook:

    “But because it all continues to be about can kicking, housing will go into a ”triple dip” in the next couple of quarters, which will last a couple of quarters at which time rates will be forced under 3% in order to recreate the same conditions that came on 3.5% this time around.”

    http://mhanson.com/archives/1013

    buy now, or be priced out forever.

  5. Jim the Realtor

    MH will be right too, because him and his friend Diana O. can always rustle up evidence that makes them look good.

    They always use national data too, another smart move for the doomers.

    He tipped his hand today – he will be calling the demand weak the rest of the year, and not consider that national sales usually drop in the 4th quarter, and that sales the rest of the year will be worse due to the ultra-low inventory, not lack of demand.

    When a blogger makes his name on being a doomer, he isn’t going to change.

  6. andrewa

    Andrewa’s perennial question: How much has the price of bricks, sticks and labour increased since the end of the market boom in 2007? How much will they increase in the future? The price increases in materials and labour portend price increases in that which they are used to manufacture, residential real estate.

  7. pemeliza

    The doomers are going to be doomers until the market strengthens and pushes them back into the shadows.

  8. livinincali

    I actually expect housing to be a bright spot as we likely enter a recession later this year. Most leading economic data is pointing to at least a negative GDP print in either Q3 or Q4 2012. I think inflationary fears and low interest rates will keep demand for hard assets like homes elevated in the short term although seasonal weakness is sure to have some effect.

    The real question will be how it looks next spring selling season. YoY is probably the best gauge for housing although that doesn’t satisfy analysts looking to call tops or bottoms. Lots of variables in play including the election. You could certainly see some government action on the stimulus front after the election, depending on how things play out.

  9. Chuck Ponzi

    Wha?

    wasn’t I doom enough? (SoCal Bubble Crash Blog wasn’t negative enough?)

    Real estate is local.

    Socal still has a huge problem with retiring boomers… which asset price inflation and deterioration of the USD will take care of nicely. Noone wants to talk about where the dollars will be flowing?

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