Independent Study Suggests Housing Prices Are Significantly Undervalued

Despite the depressed global economy, many international real estate markets remain healthier than the US. Overall, economists believe that the US market is significantly undervalued, but also that …

Despite the depressed global economy, many international real estate markets remain healthier than the US. Overall, economists believe that the US market is significantly undervalued, but also that US housing prices could fall further in 2010 without another extension of the federal homebuyer tax credit. See the following article from HousingWire for more on this.

House prices in the United States are nearly 20% undervalued, especially in the states of California, Nevada, Michigan and Ohio, when compared to global markets, according to a report from independent macroeconomic research consultancy firm Capital Economics.

What’s more, the firm’s US economist, Paul Dales, writes in a separate report that prices will continue to fall, but that this will probably not trigger another economic downturn. Dales also notes that prices on a national level increased on average 3-6% in 2009. But that trend will likely end, with prices falling another 5%, unless the government extends the homebuyer tax credit.

The first note, released yesterday by chief property economist Ed Stansfield, found that in many countries — but not the United States — the house price-to-earnings ratio remained above the levels required to sustain a healthy mortgage market (illustrated below).

Claim up to $26,000 per W2 Employee

  • Billions of dollars in funding available
  • Funds are available to U.S. Businesses NOW
  • This is not a loan. These tax credits do not need to be repaid
The ERC Program is currently open, but has been amended in the past. We recommend you claim yours before anything changes.

Stansfield, by his admission, is hard pressed for an explanation as to why global housing prices remain detached from reality. In the United States, the economy is characterized by factors like growing unemployment, a dip in net wealth and an aversion to taking on debt, which outweigh potential market stimuli such as federal tax credits and low interest rate.

The situation is not the same in other global markets, potentially explaining why housing remains overvalued, despite an abundance of the population hurting during an extended period of global economic doldrums. Employment in the UK and Australia, for example, remains resilient.

“If the [tax] credit wasn’t boosting demand, sales would not have accelerated so spectacularly in the months ahead of the original end-November expiration date and then collapsed in December,” writes Dales in his most recent United States economic focus piece (illustration below).

States where homes are the most overvalued are: Delaware, Montana and Oregon, as well as Washington DC, according to the Capital Economics reports.

Analysts at Barclays Capital maintain that housing prices are unlikely to appreciate in the near future.

This article has been republished from HousingWire. You can also view this article at
HousingWire, a mortgage and real estate news site.

advertisement

Does Your Small Business Qualify?

Claim Up to $26K Per Employee

Don't Wait. Program Expires Soon.

Click Here

Share This:

In this article