Is Perception.... Reality in New Hampshire's Housing Market?
A special addition of the New Hampshire Association (NHAR) of REALTORS®
Market trends
written by Peter Francese was just released. It is pretty interesting
and I've reprinted it below in it's entirety with the blessings of
NHAR. The comparison used is buying a
flat panel HDTV and
buying a house..While
still expensive people still buy the TV..don't they? Even though those
High-def TVs have come down in price since last year...they are still
pricey and everyone knows that prices could likely be lower still next
year...yet people buy. Peter goes on to say it is a "
phenomenon worth noting" because it is a comparison that relates to the New Hampshire housing market.
Buyer's who are not in a hurry will wait it out because they believe prices will likely come down
and be more affordable in the future...it is a far cry from the
attitude of just last year when buyers bought quickly in fear of prices
rising. Last year multiple offers were the norm and
buyers frantically tried to out bid each other to buy their dream home.
Peter goes on the explain the importance of the ratio between wage
increases and home prices. This is something to consider as we try and
figure out where New Hampshire home prices are going.
Questions about the market or homes contact me here or e-mail me. To read the latest state wide market report full of stats, visit my blog here .
December 21 2006
Consumers' perceptions are key to home buyer actions
by Peter Francese
Have you thought about buying a flat-panel HDTV recently? If so,
perhaps you experienced what we call “buyer hesitation” because you
weren’t sure if the price of those cool new TVs, which have been
dropping, might be even lower next year.
With regard to those television sets, millions of Americans have
decided that now is the time to buy. This is in part because they have
become more affordable, but also because consumers now believe that the
price is not likely to go much lower.
That same phenomenon is worth noting as it relates to the housing
market here in New Hampshire. Many buyers, particularly those who are
not in a hurry, are hesitating because they believe that prices are
likely to be lower in the near future. This represents a significant
shift in the psychology of home buyers from a year or two ago, when
most of them thought home prices would keep rising.
The key question is this: When will this hesitation-leaning consumer
sentiment regarding housing start to turn into a now-is-the-time-to-buy
attitude?
One similarity between a home and a flat-panel HDTV is the issue of affordability.
The price of those televisions may not have reached their absolute
lowest point, but they are significantly more affordable than they were
a year ago.
One way to measure housing
affordability is to calculate the ratio between average wages and home
prices. This is easy, because the New Hampshire Housing Finance
Authority publishes median home purchase prices at least annually, and
the New Hampshire Economic and Labor Market Information Bureau
publishes annual average wages for private employers. Both have data
going back to 1990.
The ratio between
those two numbers was remarkably flat through most of the 1990s. In
1990, the median home price was 5.3 times the average annual private
employment wage. By 1992, that ratio had come down to 4.1, and with
only slight variations it remained there until 2000, when the home
price-to-wage ratio was still 4.1.
From
1992 to 2000, median home prices, which increased 41.5 percent,
virtually tracked wages, which rose 43.8 percent.
But Chart I below shows what has happened since 2000. In the first half
of this decade, home prices jumped from 4.1 to 6.1 times average wages.
The reason: Median home prices rose 74.8 percent between 2000 and 2005,
while average wages increased just 16.4 percent. For a comparison, the
US consumer price index rose 13.4 percent in the same five-year period.
Two important notes: Interest rates were
at historic lows during the first half of this decade, and vacation
home buyers in New Hampshire were far more abundant than they had been
during the 1990s.
Unless there are
significant interest rate cuts in the near future, during the last half
of this decade it would be logical to expect home prices to track much
closer to wage increases. But there are other forces at work.
We don’t know, for example, what will happen with regard to second home
buyers. There is some indication that rising equity prices in the stock
market may fuel some additional buying of second or even third homes in
our state as well as in Maine and Vermont. Increasing wealth abroad may
also bring more foreign buyers.
One
additional factor is that older home buyers with substantial equity are
a larger fraction of home owners in New England than at any time in the
past. That makes it more likely that home prices will track at a
somewhat higher ratio to wages than they did in the decade just past.
Perhaps more potential home buyers would think it was time to buy if
the median home price-to-wages ratio here were to gradually return to
5.7 or what it was in 2003. If next year’s average wages were to rise
at the same rate as they did last year (3.7 percent), that would mean
in 2007 the average wage would be $44,000 and the median home price
would be $250,800, or just about where it was in 2005.
The bottom line is that if average wages continue to rise and second
home buyers remain in the picture, then the consumers’ perception is
likely to be that home prices are stabilizing and it is time to buy.
But we should keep an eye on work force growth as well as wage
increases going into 2007, because that will have a big effect on
consumer sentiment regarding housing.
Sources: NH Housing Finance Authority & NH Economic and Labor Market Information Bureau
The Real Estate Market Trends newsletter is provided for the benefit of
the members of the New Hampshire Association of REALTORS®, Inc.
©Copyright 2006 New Hampshire Association of REALTORS®, Inc. All Rights
Reserved.
Peter Francese is the Demographic Advisor to the New Hampshire Association of REALTORS®.