Housing Market On Shaky Ground

While few are as blunt as Peter Schiff in warning of another bubble in , mainstream analysts are starting to worry that the US housing market isn't as strong as many believe. Peter warns that rising home prices are a product of extremely low interest rates suppressed by the Federal Reserve. Robert Shiller, Nobel Laureate economist, seems to agree in a recent interview on CNBC:

There's also the worry that the very low interest rates that we've had, with the 10-year just above 2%. That has also been driving this [housing] market. That is fragile… I'm not calling a turning point yet, but I feel a little bit of anxiety about the market.”

Shiller plays it cool, but admits that he thinks the market is looking like a bubble in San Francisco and possibly Miami:

The two best cities on this 12-month basis are Miami and San Francisco. There's a pattern here I think. It is glamor cities. Beautiful places that have been the most bubbly in the past. I don't know exactly what accounts for these big price increases in those cities, but I suspect it has something to do with their history of speculative bias. I don't think of it as a good sign. It's getting a little too bubbly in San Francisco…

The Wall Street Journal is also reporting on a slow-down in the housing market. In an article published yesterday, John Carney writes, “The US housing market has gone wobbly.” He continues:

Sales of new homes in November were down 1.6% from a year ago, according to Commerce Department data last week. Existing-home sales for that month were down 6.1%. The monthly survey of U.S. home builders from housing-research firm John Burns Real Estate Consulting Inc. found the per-community sales pace shrank by an average of 20% in November, year over year.

“This slowdown may not be fully evident in the Case-Shiller/S&P Home Price Index figures due Tuesday. Those have a three-month lag; the newest report will reflect home-price changes in October. Even so, the trend hasn't been promising. September's report showed annual home-price growth in the 20-city index slowing 0.7 percentage points to 4.9%. That was the index's first reading below 5% since 2012.”

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