"While today's foreclosure settlement deal is by some accounts expected to
help the housing market, as the foreclosure pipeline is once again unclogged, it
is unclear what this will actually do for price discovery and clearing levels
when one considers the already untenable shadow housing inventory, which can be
summarized simply as follows - excess supply. It is this overhang that
has to clear before there is any hope for incremental demand interest.
And since mortgage rates are already at record low levels, and only an MBS QE
could do much to stimulate even lower rates (which has its own set of adverse
consequences), it is now obvious that from a purely psychological standpoint as
long as people expect rates to decline in the future, they will
not commit to a new home loan today. What makes it even worse
is that the excess inventory has to be literally burned to the ground for
regular market clearing to resume. Unfortunately, as the following chart from
JPM shows very vividly, the burning will have a long way to go: the most
recent shadow housing inventory is now at an all time high. Think
today's action will do anything to help the housing market? Think again - if
anything it will simply see the number of foreclosed properties explode. Rather,
what it will do, is finally redirect discretionary spending
from all the squatters who have lived mortgage free in their houses for years
back into mandatory spending such as rent and mortgage bills. For those unclear,
recall this
post quantifying the benefit of the squatter economy (i.e., non paid
rental/mortgage payments going into discretionary spending) - kiss that $50
billion inflow into GDP goodbye. Paradoxically, by trying to fix housing, Obama
may have just popped the consumer discretionary bubble, of which the biggest
beneficiary is that one certain fruit-shaped company..."
at http://www.zerohedge.com/news/biggest-obstacle-record-shadow-housing-inventory-and-how-obama-may-have-just-popped-consumer-sp
at http://www.zerohedge.com/news/biggest-obstacle-record-shadow-housing-inventory-and-how-obama-may-have-just-popped-consumer-sp