The housing market has turned—at last.
The U.S. finally has moved beyond attention-grabbing predictions from housing "experts" that housing is bottoming. The numbers are now convincing.
I love how people look at a "market" where the distortions are ridiculously large, to the point of overpowering everything else, se a small uptick and say "the numbers are now convincing."
What am I talking about? Let's just look at the mortgage rate -- 3.5%.
Now let's look at a prototypical $200,000 loan for 30 years at 3.5%. This produces a payment of $895.48.
How much house does $895.48 buy if rates go up to a more-normal 6%?
Answer: $150,104.
So you think housing has "bottomed" eh? That's very nice. You have an imputed 25% valuation increase in the price of houses today that will, over time, go away.
This is something that nobody talks about, except me. I've brought this up repeatedly -- you want to buy houses when rates are historically high, not low, because then when rates go down you get the imputed increase.
In this case you're buying the already-applied imputed increase, which means you are buying an embedded 25% over-valuation compared against historically-reasonable 30 year money rates.
Bottom? Maybe for a little while. But distorted markets always, eventually, correct back to the mean -- or more.