Archive for the ‘Real Estate Prices’ Category

The land of the severley unaffordable house.

Monday, January 23rd, 2012

The latest Demographia survey of World housing markets (see it here) shows that Auckland’s housing market is the 6th most unaffordable in the world. The average ratio of house prices to incomes in Auckland is 6.4, only marginally under London, and higher than in New York. New Zealand has no affordable housing markets, and not even any ‘moderately unaffordable’ markets by their definitions.

The state of NZ’s housing market is so bad that it even deserves a special mention in their report. I have included the main points below in quotes.

The report states that :
“The deterioration of housing affordability in many of the markets rated in the Demographia International Housing Affordability Survey is unprecedented based upon the available historical data. Australia and New Zealand, for example, which had legendary housing affordability from after World War II to the 1980s and 1990s have seen house prices reach levels that are double to nearly triple their historic ratio to household incomes. The economic evidence indicates that this trend is strongly related to the implementation of more restrictive land use regulations, especially measures that create scarcity in land for housing thus drive up prices.”

“New Zealand: Housing in New Zealand was severely unaffordable, with a Median Multiple of 5.4, nearly three-quarters above the historic affordability norm of 3.0. Housing had been affordable in the early 1990s, with a Median Multiple of under 3.0.
Auckland was the least affordable market, with a Median Multiple of 6.4. Along with Auckland, Christchurch (6.3), Tauranga-Western Bay of Plenty (5.9), Dunedin (5.2) and Wellington(5.1) were severely unaffordable. Three New Zealand markets were seriously unaffordable, Palmerston North (4.1), Napier-Hastings (4.8) and Hamilton (4.8). New Zealand had no affordable markets and no moderately unaffordable markets”

Why is New Zealand Real Estate so expensive?

I don’t believe that restrictive land policies are to blame for the massive increase in unaffordability, as the report states. This is an over-simplification. Do you think prices would have risen if the banks were unable to lend at such high multiples of a person’s income? Of course not. The real truth is that inflation has been under-reported in New Zealand, and there has been no restriction or regulation on how much banks can lend out and under what criterea, it’s completely up to the banks themselves.

If New Zealand had capital controls on lending for housing (for example banks can only lend at 3 times household income), then house prices could not have risen to the level that they are. Also the government needs to change the way they measure inflation to include housing credit effects. In the 1980′s and 1990′s, house prices tracked inflation very closely. In the latest boom, there was a massive divergence with inflation being reported as under 5% while houses went up by 20% a year at the peak.

The real culrpit here is unregulated controls on housing credit, fuelled by banks who had access to cheap money from offshore lending. Add into the mix, that the current way of measuring inflation through the cost of a basket of goods (i.e. the CPI index) does not take into account credit expansion due to housing speculation. It is a shame that NZ faces this problem, as it will hold it back economically for years to come.

Is the USA about to become the next Japan?

Wednesday, January 18th, 2012

Japan had a massive housing bubble in the 80′s which then crashed in 1990, and since then they have had 20 years of deflation. Will the same thing happen to the USA? House prices are continuing to fall in the US some five years or so since they peaked in mid-2006. The question has to be asked – will the USA also suffer 20 years of deflation in asset prices?

Check out the below chart of US house prices vs Japan, New Zealand and Britain since 1990. The red line is the Japanese house price index. It shows the massive devaluation that has happened in Japan since the real estate bubble burst there in 1990. It is interesting to see that New Zealand has had the smallest correction since the global housing bubble burst, which is surprising considering that it has some of the most expensive real estate in the world comparative to earnings.

US, Japan, UK and NZ house prices since 1990

US, Japan, UK and NZ house prices since 1990

Now look at the below chart showing the Japanese stock market from 1984 until Jan 2012. Look at the massive bubble that formed in the 80′s that is still imploding, twenty years after its peak in 1990.

Japanese stock market

What both these charts show is the massive devaluation in asset prices that have occured in Japan since 1990 as a result of the huge real estate and stock bubble they experienced in the 1980′s. Right now in 2012 we have a situation where the US federal gross debt is now approaching 100% of GDP, and despite two rounds of QE the US has been unable to stimulate the economy significantly, and still looks a long way away from being able to run surpluses. There are significant parallels with the picture now in the USA and the picture in 1990 for Japan.

Japan also tried to use its own form of QE to stimulate inflation in the 1990s but only succeeded in expanding the total public debt which currently stands at around 200% of GDP. There are huge parallels here but then again the USA has a different culture and population demographic to Japan, which also faces an ageing population problem and is known for its savings culture.

I do not think that the USA will experience quite the same level of deflation in asset values as Japan did, but it is looking like we are going to be in low growth mode now for many years to come. The Western world has a lot of work to do to climb its way out of this mess. Unless the US economy can start growing significantly very soon, the US government debt will simply keep climbing. Their only recoruse will be to keep interest rates at near zero (just have Japan has done), and hope that inflation starts to erode the real value of the nation’s debt.

Perhaps the US will succeed where Japan failed, by either inflating away their debt or growing their way out of their current malaise. Only time will tell.

What will 2012 bring?

Friday, January 13th, 2012

2011 was a year where not much happened all round – the NZ stockmarket (main index), housing market, and currency were virtually flat year-on-year. We have entered the age of deleveraging and also a huge population bulge will be retiring which will start to have a drag on house prices and perhaps even stocks in the coming years. There are huge opposing forces and uncertainties in the global enivornment, especially surrouding the Euro area. With the developed nations mired in debt, it is going to be years before things return to the ‘good old days’ of ever rising asset prices.

OK, so the new year is a time where everyone loves to make predictions about the coming year, if anything it’s fun to look back on a year later. This is my assessment of the most likely outcomes in 2012.

The New Zealand dollar

The US economy is making a comeback so the NZD/USD should remain relatively unchanged for 2012, or at least within the normal range of volatility. I expect a trading range of 75c to 85c. Against the Euro the Kiwi dollar should do very well this year, provided that there is not some catastrophic event which causes a flight to risk (and therefore risk assets such as the Kiwi dollar to be sold off). As I write this the NZD/EUR has hit a new high of over 62c. I expect a trading range of 58c – 70c for the NZD/EUR with the bias to the upside. For the NZD/GBP I can see the Kiwi outperforming, but not as much as against the Euro, I can see a trading range of 49p to 55p for the NZD/GBP.

New Zealand House Prices

I expect there to be a continuation of the slow growth of house prices in Auckland, in the order of 3 or 4% in popular suburbs (in line with the general inflation level). For the rest of New Zealand I can see there being more modest growth, and even falls in some coastal or rural towns. The housing market is underpinned by very low interest rates, and relatively easy credit conditions, combined with low unemployment levels meaning fewer forced sales. What is stopping the market from running away is low or negative net migration, and a shift in consumer behaviour towards deleveraging. Also – the baby boomer’s are reaching retirement age so we are going to start seeing demographic headwinds turn against the NZ housing market over the next 10-20 years.

A huge swathe of the population will be retiring and that will mean people will downsize, or sell holiday houses as they elect to use the cash tied up in their houses for world travel or to help pay for medical expenses during their retirement. This will mean continued downwards pressure on the housing market for years to come. Overall there are opposing forces at work – i.e. easy credit vs demographic headwinds. It takes a number of factors to come together to produce a property price boom and I do not see any of these factors coninciding for many years to come. The property ‘gravy train’ is over for the forseeable future at least.

The stockmarket

Again I believe we are in a tradtional pattern of trading, which means buy in fall (Northern Hemisphere fall that is) and “go away in May”. So I would say the stockmarket will have a modest uptrend until about April or May, and then a correction for June, July August, with a rally from September or October onwards. I would be very surprised if the stockmarket ends the year significantly up or down on where it started. After last year’s modest year-on-year decline, I am predicting this year will see the stockmarket gain about 3% from where it began on the 1st January. There are simply too many global headwinds in terms of high debt levels in the developed world to allow any sort of major recovery to get underway.

Strategies

The safest strategy in this enviornment is to pay down debt and find ways to save money, by reducing expenditure on unneccessary items. I have a few stocks with good dividends, but I would be a very cautious buyer of stocks, only have a handful and nothing you cannot afford to lose!

2011 – The year in review.

Tuesday, January 10th, 2012

Looking back a year on it’s interesting to see how my predictions actually went. Unfortunately I have not had much time for this blog in the last year due to extreme busyness at work and in my personal life too. Here’s a wrap-up of how my predictions actually went.

The NZD (New Zealand Dollar)

The NZD/USD had a volatile year, and went much higher than I predicted, but ended up in the range that I thought the currency would trade in over the year. At the peak the NZD/USD hit 87c, which had every newspaper clamouring that the Kiwi (NZD) was headed towards parity with the US dollar. This would have been the time to sell NZD, in hindsight. The NZD/USD fiinished up the year at about 77c which is in the range I thought the currency would trade in.

The Stockmarket (S&P500 and NZX50)

I was almost bang on with my predictions about the stockmarket. We had a rally from the beginning of 2011 until April 29th where the market peaked. The market then struggled to regain form, suffering a large and sharp summer correction. The market bottomed on October 03 (the beginning of fall) and rallied somewhat until the year end but did not reoup it’s losses since the peak in April.

It was a very lacklustre year for the stockmarket and anyone on the long side would have really struggled. I know New Zealand investors that got completely hammered trading NZ stocks (the NZ market generally tracks the S&P500) – with some stocks down 60% or more. I was lucky enough to sell my holdings mid-Feburary, which was mainly for personal reasons rather than having a crystal ball (I was planning a wedding and needed the cash!). I am glad in hindsight that I did.

 I dipped my toes back into the market in about August but none of those stocks have done that well, being down about 15% each. In hindsight  would rather have stayed out of the market altogether, although I did expect the end of year rally to be much more pronounced than it actually was.

The NZ housing market

OK, I was almost on the money here, but still slightly too pessmimistic. I predicted there would be a very slight dip in prices (in the order of 1-2%) but instead prices were stable and even slightly up in Auckland (depending on the suburb). As for the rest of NZ, it still looks in pretty dire shape, prices may still be falling in coastal areas and small towns, although this has little impact on National statistics due to the low volumes and low values in the smaller cities. The housing market in Auckland has been very resilient, most likely due to the influx of people from earthquake-damaged Christchurch.

Conclusions

2011 was a very difficult year for anyone trading or investing, with no really easy wins. There are huge global forces pushing the markets around, such as the European debt crisis. The Western world is mired in debt and doing its best to recover, but it seems to be a long and tough battle. Until the European debt situation is resolved I can’t see huge growth coming from anywhere anytime soon.

 I think we are in a similar time to the Great Depression from 1929-1948 where we have had so many years of debt building up that it needs to be washed out of the system, and that is going to take a very long time and will mean slow growth for 2012 and the forseeable future.

What will 2011 bring?

Monday, January 10th, 2011

A quick recap of 2010


My predictions for 2010 were pretty much on the mark. The NZ dollar traded mostly in a range between 70-75c to the USD, with the odd foray higher and lower, for short periods of time. The equity markets rallied early in the year then entered a sizeable correction during the Northern Hemisphere’s summer. The housing market was flat to slighty down. Overall it was a lacklustre year with no real gains being made or losses either for that matter. Without the US government’s QEII program we would be looking in much worse shape.

Where to in 2011?

In 2011 I can see:

1) An early rally in the stockmarket until late March or April, then a summer correction, then possibly another rally late in the year. I believe we are back to the traditional patterns of trading (buy in the Fall, go away in May).

2) The NZ dollar will gain strength against the greenback, but will still struggle to march past the 80c mark. NZ is teetering on the brink of a double-dip recession and this is going to keep the currency necessarily depressed for some time. But the US economy is struggling too, so relative to each other, they will stay about the same.

3) The NZ housing market will show further weakness until later in the year. The low sales volumes we have been experiencing are a sign of further falls in prices to come. The correction in prices will not be massive however, we are talking only a few percentage points if that. This is due to the sales volumes of higher-end properties dragging the median prices up.

4) The Rugby World Cup will fuel some optimism in the local equity markets (in stocks like THL and NZO). This optimism will fade once the fans leave and winter truly quicks in.

Conclusions:

I am staying long equities but will review this sometime in late March and early April. With property investing, now is the time to put in some cheeky low offers, if you have the required deposits that the banks are asking for. The greatest irony is that the best time to buy is always when people have the least cash and finance is the hardest to get. So therefore it lost on most people as most people cannot get finance to snap up the bargains as they come along. I don’t predict any massive rally, but I can’t see any major correction either, bar some unforseen event (such as a war breaking out). If the US government implements QEIII, we will see a further rally in the equity and commodity markets.

Happy investing!

NZ house prices follow classic bubble popping signs

Monday, June 28th, 2010

When bubbles burst they follow a familiar pattern

The bursting of every asset bubble follows classic signs – as postulated by Dr John Paul Rodrique and shown in the illustration below. This has a lot in common with the typical “ABC” correction pattern which is described in Elliot Wave theory. When a bubble bursts, it generally goes through the following stages:

1) Denial (It’s not really happening – it’s only a temporary blip before the uptrend continues!)

2) Bull trap (The market turns around and rallies back towards the former high – sucking investors back into the market)

3) Return to normal (Prices almost at their former topping levels, “normality has returned to the markets” in other words)

4) Fear (The market turns around and starts falling again – people become fearful)

5) Capitulation (Reality sinks in – people then panic and the market then sells off agressively)

6) Return to the mean (Finally prices or valuations return to their mean level – or back to the mean trendline)

bubble_phases

Phases of an asset bubble

With respect to Elliot Wave theory, when a market enters a “correction”, the pattern is what is typically called an “ABC” pattern. The correction has 3 phases:

A) The initial leg down

B) The bounce back towards (but not exceeding) the former high

C) The final leg down, taking the market below the low reached in the initial (A) leg down

Typical Elliot Wave Corrective Pattern

Typical Elliot Wave A-B-C Corrective Pattern

NZ Housing Market is displaying the classic pattern …

The NZ housing market is displaying the classic Elliot Wave ABC pattern and also consistent with Dr John Paul Rodrique’s Bubble Bursting theory. Take a look at the below chart which shows the NZ House Price index since the peak in 2007:

NZ House Price Index From Peak in June 2007 - May 2010

NZ House Price Index From Peak in June 2007 - May 2010

There is no question that the NZ Housing Market Boom from 2000-2007 was a classic bubble. With house prices going up some years by 20-25% in a year, the same house on the same street without any modifications appreciated about 100% from the start of the Boom (or “bubble”) to the peak in 2007. This was driven by the combination of key drivers in the Property Cycle coming together to create a property Boom but also a huge market influencer was the easy and cheap availability of mortgage credit that flowed into NZ from offshore banks during this period. Without the exceptionally cheap and easily available mortgage credit we would still have had an appreciation in values but it would simply not have been so extreme.

Let’s look at the NZ housing market bubble popping process since it began in 2007 with respect to our classic ABC corrective pattern and also Dr John Paul Rodrique’s bubble popping paradigm.

A) The “Denial” phase. NZ house prices fall 10% from the peak in October 2007 to the trough in Jan 2009.

B) The “Bull Trap” followed by the “Return to Normal” phase. NZ House Prices rise to just about 3% below their October 2007 Peak. Many people believe the bust is over and the market has returned to its “normal” behaviour (rising perpetually? ;-) )

C) The Fear, Capitulation and Return-to-Mean phase. These phases have yet to come but with prices starting to fall again it looks like leg C has already begun.

The road is long with many a winding turn….

What we know about the Property Cycle is that the typical property Slump lasts at least 60% of the length (in time) of the preceding Boom – by that token NZ’s property Slump should end somewhere around the end of the year 2011 or the beginning of the year 2012. It is going to take time (at least 2 more years) for the NZ market to return to the long term trendline rate of growth which is the “Return to Mean” point in Rodrique’s chart. Note that this does not mean that nominal values will fall anywhere near their pre-boom levels – but the affordability of homes or the return on investment (measured by the rental yield of a property) may fall to pre-boom levels or within a ballpark range. Only then can buying pressure step in to propel the market into a recovery phase.


At present interest rates are rising in NZ which is going to have a dampening effect on house prices. While unemployment seems to have peaked and the situation is improving, we know from previous studies that a housing recovery always lags the bottom of the employment cycle. It does not take much for house prices to enter a downwards spiral due to the fact that house price valuations are based off what a similar house in the neighbourhood last sold for. So if your neighbour’s house gets sold at a discount to market value, then that effectively marks down all the other house prices on the same street.  This effect works to build positive momentum for house prices when the market is rising but equally can create a downwards spiral of prices when the market is weak and sellers are forced to accept lower prices.

In my opinion NZ House Prices will fall to about 10% below their 2007 peak by the end of 2011. Wages and rental yields have a long way to go yet to returning NZ’s market to normal levels of affordability for the average first time buyer, or investor. We are not out of the woods yet!

New Zealand house prices more expensive than UK, USA

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

How do NZ House Prices compare with the USA and UK?

Everyone generally accepts that NZ homes are highly unaffordable. But how unaffordable? I set out to find out – and uncovered the shocking truth. Not only do New Zealanders pay more for their homes than their UK/USA counterparts in terms of House-Price-to-Income multiples, but the average NZ house price is actually higher than both the UK and USA when you price these nation’s house prices into New Zealand Dollars (at the given exchange rate at the time of writing). This sounds almost unbelievable, but it is true – as the data below shows.

Average NZ House Price  NZD $405,235 (3.9% below the Q4 2007 peak ) – from Quotable Value as at 18th May 2010

Average US House Price USD $258,000 (18% below July 2006 peak) – from US Census Dept

Average UK House Price £167,802 (10% below Oct 2007 peak) – from Nationwide Building Society

Current Fx rates as at 18th May 2010

NZD/USD = 0.6976
NZD/GBP =
0.4822

Current house prices coverted into NZ dollars:

NZ Avg Price in NZD = $405,235
US Avg Price in NZD = $369,839
UK Avg Price in NZD =
$347,992

Differences in % between NZ house prices and the US/UK

US House Prices cost 8.73% less than NZ house prices (priced into NZD)
UK House Prices cost 14.12% less than NZ house prices (priced into NZD)

OK so let’s look at average salaries in NZ vs the UK/USA

NZ annual average salary = $43,836 (source Statistics NZ as at June 2009)
US average annual wage =
USD $41,334 (source Social Security Online mid-2008 )
UK median annual salary = £25,428 (source National Statistics Online April 2009)

Again let’s convert wages in the US and UK into $NZD

NZ average annual wage = NZD $43,836
US average annual wage = NZD $59,251
UK average annual wage = NZD $52,733

And now let’s calculate House Price to Income ratios:

NZ House-Price-Income-Multiple = 9.2
US House-Price-Income-Multiple = 6.2
UK
House-Price-Income-Multiple = 6.6

Conclusion

Based on the House Price to Annual Average Income ratio, NZ house prices are 48% more expensive than US homes and 39% more expensive than UK homes. The USA has the most affordable housing of the 3 nations.

New Zealand must address this huge imbalance in the economy. Let’s hope that the 2010 Budget from the National government goes some way towards restoring some normality into the NZ housing situation. There is an excellent explanation about how NZ house prices became so unaffordable by Rodney Dickens here .

Peter Waring

NZ house prices – what is in store?

Monday, July 20th, 2009

The global housing markets are in chaos, but what about New Zealand? Is New Zealand Real Estate going to be immune from a massive drop in values? The US has seen a 30% fall from the peak, and the UK a 20% fall, and in both cases prices just keep falling. Both these nations have had similar booms to NZ, so will NZ experience a similar fate?

The state of the NZ housing market has a debate that has raged every since the global housing bubble burst. Is the NZ market really different from the UK and USA markets or is it simply going the same way, but with some sort of weird time lag? Amongst all the opinions around is there anyone who can give an honest and impartial analysis of the market and what its going to do next? Or is everyone so biased in their views that nobody can be expected to be impartial? Well the job of an analyst is to be impartial so with that in mind – let’s take a look at the state of play with the NZ property market.

Can house prices even be predicted?

There are many analysts around who claim to have a property market model that will predict house prices. However – when you look into these models most of these are based on only a few different factors, available supply, current demand, fundamental measures of valuation, and there you have the answer. But the truth is that none of these measures were useful at predicting how high prices would go on the way up, so why would they be useful on the way down? The market is not solely a function of supply and demand, nor is it solely a function of sentiment.

The best property market model that I have found ‘out there’ is the one described in Grow Rich with the Property Cycle by Kieran Trass. Trass’s model uses 17 different factors, which conisist of emotional drivers, demographic drivers, and financial drivers, the combination of which divide the market into 3 phases of ‘Boom’, ‘Slump’ and ‘Recovery’. Guess which phase we’re currently in? Yep… the Slump.. we are in a Slump but how low will prices go before the Recovery happens?

How low could it actually go?

In order to get some idea of how low prices we can actually go – we have to look at history as a guide. While ‘past performance is not indicative of future results’, they sure are handy when it comes to giving us a ballpark idea of what could potentially happen. At least a worst case scenario is what we are after. In the book Bubbles and How to Survive Them the author made a study of various historical house price crashes around the world. He found that the average housing crash lasted 4 and half years and resulted in an average fall in prices of 35% in real money. New Zealand had a housing ‘crash’ in the late 70′s with prices falling 37% in real terms over 7 years, however, due to the extremely high inflation at the time, nominal prices did not fall by much. So therefore nobody really counts this as a ‘crash’.

The below graph is very telling and shows the increase in the NZ house price to (annual) income ratio since 1989:

As can be seen from the above graph – NZ house prices have massively increased vs incomes since about 2001. Back in the early 90′s the ratio was only around 5, which then increased to 6.5 by the year 2000 and then it simply took off – peaking at over 10.5 at the peak of the housing mania in late 2007. What this says is that over the past 20 years, house price growth has outstripped wage growth by a factor of 2:1. To go back to where we were 20 years ago would take a 50% drop in prices from the peak in 2007. To take us back to the year 2000 prices would mean a 39% drop in the average house price.

However house price to income ratios just give us a historical context of what prices have done in the past. In the world of property investing, houses are priced off their rental yields achievable assuming 100% financing. In essence, rental yields are like P/E ratio of a stock. Simply take the annual rental achievable for a property and divide it by the house price, and you have a measure of how ‘expensive’ a property actually is. So then, what about historical rental yields on property in NZ?

NZ rental yields are poor

According to Census data, in 2006 the median NZ weekly rent was $201 per week, in 2001 the median was around $193 per week and in 1996 the median rent in NZ was $172 per week. This gives us a fairly constant rental yield of about 5% on average from 1996-2001 but then from 2001-2006 according to our data the average rental yield dropped down to only 2.9%. In other words rents increased about 1.7% per year on average from 1996-2006 yet at the same time house prices increased on average by 10.4%. This staggering difference shows the extent of the house price surge in the new millenium far above and beyond rental values and inflation. It is interesting to note that rental yields seem to more or less track inflation over time.

Conclusion – Something has got to give

If this house price “correction” is to play out like the historical average of a 35% drop in real values (for the average housing “crash”), then  something has got to give. NZ house prices in nominal terms are only 10% down from their peak, so there is a long way to go to get a 35% drop in real values given that inflation is very low. The most likely scenario is that we are going to see a combination of falling prices coupled with inflationary pressures (rents and incomes will increase) for some years. The Reserve Bank is forecasting a 20% drop in values, so perhaps the additional 15% drop in real terms is going to come from wage and rental inflation spread over time. It will be interesting to see how this one plays out.

Good luck with your property investing!