This post first appeared in the SPECIAL EDITION: Cirios Trends: A Decade in Flux
The books are officially closed on a decade which will be remembered for an historic real estate boom in the United States that busted in spectacular fashion, nearly taking the entire world financial system down with it.
Of course, the real story is a touch more complicated: Our housing bust was merely the most glaring crack in a global economy that grew far too dependent on cheap debt, where flows of money around the world magnetized to the hot asset, blowing bubbles first in stocks, then real estate, then commodities.
During each subsequent bust, governments rushed to the aide of markets, stitching them up with a patchwork of looser regulations, low interest rates and promises it would never happen again.
Late in 2008, the collapse of the credit markets culminated in the failure of some of this country’s most storied financial institutions. When the dust settled, Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers, Merrill Lynch,
Washington Mutual, Wachovia, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, AIG, Countrywide and a host of smaller, lesser known entities had either gone bust or been bought for a song by stronger, better capitalized firms.
Some simply melted into this or that government agency, while many members of our financial complex survived only with historic government aide. Citigroup, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, JP Morgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, GM and Chrysler are alive today thanks to massive taxpayer-funded bailouts.
But enough looking behind us; historians and journalists will be employed for decades slicing and dicing this most turbulent of decades.
Surveying the horizon, the primary fear among economists, investors and ordinary Americans is that the inflationary effects of pumping trillions of dollars into an economy must eventually come home to roost.
To be sure, there are those who remain firmly in the camp that believes the more pressing concern is inflation’s less-well understood counterpart, deflation. But even the most ardent deflationists believe theirs is a debate that is more accurately painted as one of time horizons, rather than absolutes.
The US dollar is in the crosshairs of this philosophic, as well as very practical debate. The greenback’s standing as the global reserve currency has been thrown into question as investors around the world scratch their collective heads and try to figure out how we’ll ever repay our staggering, ever-growing debt.
And now, as our economy appears to be slowly healing, the Federal Reserve faces the unenviable task of withdrawing its generous stimulus. In March, the Fed plans to scale back its purchases of mortgage backed securities, spooking more than a few market participants.
The fear, particularly for the housing market, is that any Fed pullback will push up interest rates.
Higher interest rates translate into lower purchasing power for buyers, curtailing the steady stream of homebuying demand that, coupled with ongoing foreclosure moratoria, has propped up prices in recent months.
We kick off 2010 with mortgage rates approaching the all-time lows set last spring. Sure, they could always go lower, but the smart money is betting it’s just a matter of time before rising prices force regulators to ease their foot off the monetary accelerator. Higher mortgage rates are likely on the horizon.
So as we begin the first true test of our nascent economic recovery, Cirios would like to take you through a bit of history. We’ll look first at the macroeconomic picture as it relates to home prices, inflation and interest rates. Next we’ll examine a few California real estate markets illustrative of the localized trends masked by most broad economic measures.
But first, a word of caution: As Mark Twain’s oft-cited saying goes, “History doesn’t repeat itself, but it often rhymes.”
It goes without saying that the financial upheaval of the past 24 months has been, in a word, unique. There is no historical analogue, no matter how neatly we try to jam this experience into some mold cast in the 1930s, 1970s or 1980s. By extension, any conclusions drawn from this historic perspective should be taken with a very large grain of salt.
Nevertheless, understanding where we stand and how we got here is essential to understanding where we’re headed. And understanding where we’re headed is essential to finding and taking advantage of the plentiful investment opportunities the previous decade’s turmoil has created.