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Looking to Recoup Your Home’s Lost Value? It’s not Happening—Ever!

Reblogger Steve Roake
Real Estate Agent with Freedom Group Global 471.009781

Excellent evaluation of the current housing market.  Many people are asking when values will rebound to pre-bust levels.  The answer - Never - is alarming at first glance.  However, with a little exploration of long term real estate growth and inflation, it becomes obvious that never is exactly what the housing market needs to maintain stability. 

Original content by John Mulkey

I’m still surprised by the number of people who believe that home values will magically return to those of 5 years ago; and if you are one of those looking to recoup your home’s lost value, it’s not happening—ever.  How can I be so certain?  It’s pretty easy once you look at the facts.

 

Home values have historically appreciated at a rate near the rate of inflation—once you adjust for the differences in size and discount for geographic anomalies.  However, that trend changed when we began the recovery from the “tech-bubble” of the last decade.  As the Fed encouraged easy credit (an understatement) and the mortgage industry discovered they could package and market sub-prime loans at premium prices, we saw a housing boom unlike any we’ve ever experienced.  Driven by increased demand, home prices skyrocketed, rising 10% or more per year in some of the hottest areas. 

 

And now that prices have fallen by 30% or more (60% in the worst areas), owners want to know when they’ll recoup the value lost during the crash.  Many, nearing retirement, had viewed their accumulated equity as a cushion to supplement their retirement income; others saw it as a fast track to “easy street,” and have already spent their “windfall.”  However, all want to know when values are coming back, but unfortunately they are not—not next year or the year after—not ever. 

 

To understand why I would say “not ever,” we must look at what drives home prices up.  It’s not that homes somehow become more valuable over time or that ownership rates historically trend upwards.  Disregarding the growth in the average home’s size over the past few decades and ignoring the geographic appeal of a few specific areas, home prices have increased because of inflation.  As the dollar became worth less—some would say worthless—it was necessary for home prices, along with the prices of other goods and services to follow.  When we look at the trend-line for home prices over the past fifty years, it has closely followed the rate of inflation. 

 

What that means is that home prices WILL increase in the future, but the majority of that increase will be consumed by the corresponding increase in the rate of inflation.  If we sell that home, those dollars received will have less value than those of today—given the likelihood that the U.S. will continue to experience some degree of inflation. 

 

The home prices experienced during the housing bubble were artificially high—the GRAPH below from Calculated Risk demonstrates just how far out of line they were—and their fall was to be expected.  The bubble prices were not based in an inherent increase in a home’s value, but were artificially driven by forces not directly related to housing; and, barring a direct attempt by the government to create another bubble, they cannot return. 

 

What we’re left with is the natural progression of housing following inflation.  Home prices will not equal those of the bubble for many years unless we experience—as some have predicted—a significant increase in the rate of inflation.  But once again, such an increase will serve only to compensate for a loss in the value of the dollar; it cannot return the losses suffered following the crash, for those dollars have been lost forever.      

 

A “recovery” in housing won’t feel like recovery at all.  The best we can hope for is stabilization and a return to the natural trend of home prices following the rate of inflation.  To anticipate a sudden and dramatic upwards movement is only wishful thinking, and it is wishing for a return to the very conditions that caused the collapse.  

graph of home prices

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Steve serves the real estate needs of buyers and sellers in Shorewood, Plainfield, Joliet, Crest Hill, Romeoville, Bolingbrook, Oswego, Minooka, New Lenox, Aurora, Naperville and NW Will County.  Specializing in short sales, investment properties and first time home buyers, Steve attacks problems with a tenacious outside the box approach and keeps working where many others would have given up.   

To learn more visit steveroake.kw.com or download my mobile app. Specializing in Shorewood IL Real Estate, Plainfield IL Real Estate, Joliet IL Real Estate, Minooka IL Real Estate, Channahon IL Real Estate, New Lenox IL Real Estate, Oswego IL Real Estate, Bolingbrook, IL Real Estate, Romeoville IL Real Estate, Naperville IL Real Estate. Buyers can save between $1,000 and $5,000 by working with us! 

 

Comments(1)

Rob Magnotta
Huntington Beach, Newport Beach, Seal Beach, Irvine REALTOR - Huntington Beach, CA
Huntington Beach & Newport Beach Coastal Specialist

Hi Steve. I respectfully disagree, and I think using the Case-Shiller Index doesn't work well here. The assumption the CSI makes suggests that the "bubble" was an anomaly, and therefore can't happen again. But who's to say there won't be another anomaly in 10, 15, or 20 years? Since none of us know the future, I think saying it will "never" get there again is a bit unrealistic. It's more likely it will, we simply just have no idea when or how. 40 and 50 year mortgages could become a big factor in the next boom as well. Thanks for a great, thought-provoking post!

Dec 14, 2010 06:35 AM