Posts Tagged ‘Orange County Housing Price Bottom’

Home Price bottom near for Orange County?

Tuesday, July 22nd, 2008

Updated late 7/23 with our own concrete region wide projections.

(July 22, 2008) The good news is, according to one formula, Orange County’s home price bottom may be closer than most of us thought.   On the other hand, the same formula projects that prices may still need to fall more than many of us thought.

Nobody really knows for sure, it seems like everyone has a theory about when home prices will hit bottom.

It’s Local

One thing we can be pretty sure about is that the bottom will come at different times in different locations.  We expect prices to bottom last in areas like the Inland Empire and the desert regions, which are more affected by new construction, foreclosures, and the high price of commuting.

Conversely, prices should bottom sooner in Southern California’s Coastal Plane in neighborhoods less impacted by foreclosures, new construction, high gas prices and economic slowdowns.   That might make Orange County a strong candidate for the first Southern California county to hit bottom.

An Interesting Formula

According to the calculations of one Orange County prognosticator, that bottom may only be a few months away.

Seeking Alfalfa” is a common participant in the Orange County Register’s lively real estate blog, Lansner on Real Estate (linked in our blog roll in the right column).  From what we can tell, he’s got a fair amount of experience in the lending field.  He recently came up with a formula for predicting when the market might bottom, based largely on common underwriting standards for home loans along with median prices and income levels.

What’s nice about Alfalfa’s prediction calculator is you can modify it however you wish.  As he says, it’s “a rule of thumb calculator and should be entered onto an Excel program.”   What’s also nice is that he gave us permission to reproduce it here.

Alfalfa’s basic calculation for Orange County is as follows:

MONTHS TO THE BOTTOM
Household Income: $72,600 Median
Underwriting Ratio: 36% Allowable for Housing
Annual Housing: $26,136
Monthly Housing: $2,178
Loan Constant: 0.005735 Based on FNMA 30 year Fixed Rate Loan, currently about 6.1%
Supportable Loan: $379,773
Down Payment: $75,955 Assume 20% including move-up’s
Supportable Demand: $455,728
Median Price: $500,000
Differential: $44,272
Percentage: 9%
Change Rate Up or Down: -2.9% Varies by Location, make sure to use Current change rates, not Historic
Months to the Bottom: 3

Bottom line: Based on current trends and lender standards, this formula indicates Orange County home prices should bottom after falling another 9%, which should take about three months.

When I first saw this formula, I thought of several objections, but after a while I realized most of my concerns tended to cancel each other out.  Overall, it’s as accurate and logical as anything I’ve seen so far.

Of course, there are lots of variables in the formula that could change over the next three months, from interest rates to household income.  But that’s exactly why we continue to insist that nobody can predict the bottom with absolute certainty.  (See “How low will prices go?“)

Our Current Best “Guestimate”

30% chance:  Bottom this winter:  We  think the bottom will coincide closely with our normal seasonal cycle, which bottoms in December or January for escrows that close in February and are reported by DataQuick in mid March.  (See “Predictions 101: Our 2 market cycles” and “Two big problems with DataQuick’s monthly median price reports.“)

So, instead of calling a price bottom for OC in 3 months, which would be late October, we’d use Alfalfa’s formula plus our take on the annual cycle and push the bottom back to this coming December, which DataSlow will report after those sales close in February.  But they won’t know it’s a bottom until prices start rising in the months following.

If OC actually bottoms this winter, L.A. and Ventura Counties might not be far behind, with San Diego next, then the desert and Inland Empire areas bringing up the rear a year later.  (We’d expect Santa Barbara to actually bottom ahead of the OC.)

The pick-up in sales and multiple bids on REOs indicates that if interest rates don’t go up (a big “if”), current prices may well have corrected enough and OC prices could be bottoming now, which is why we give a 30% chance of a bottom this winter.

The other 70%: There are at least three challenges to a bottom this winter:

  1. Inflation pushing interest rates up and reducing affordability.
  2. The economic slowdown that we seem to be entering, with major job losses in automotive, construction, finance and real estate.
  3. The continuing onslaught of foreclosures and resulting REOs.

40% chance:  Bottom next winter. If the economy stabilizes and foreclosures slow down by year’s end, we could hit a bottom this winter.  This is still the most common pick by most economists–recovery sometime in 2010, and has been consistently for the past year.  We think the recent sharp decline in prices may speed things up.  What would help even more would be a resumption of safe oil drilling offshore and in Alaska, with an excess profits tax being used to spur energy alternatives industries.

Again, we’re talking about the Coastal Plane areas of L.A. Orange and possibly San Diego Counties, with the Inland Empire and desert regions bottoming sometime in the following 14 months.

25% chance:  Bottom later than next winter. Either a lengthy recession, or a bottom late winter of 2010-2011.

5% chance:  Bottom before this winter. The foreclosure relief act and Fannie/Freddie stabelization are steps in the right direction, and the economic stimulus of Bush and Congress compromising on a drilling bill that would finance a “Marshal Program” of energy alternatives, things could pick up immediatly.

What to Do?

We still think market timing shouldn’t be as important as your personal situation in making housing or maybe even investing decisions. (See “What to do when nobody knows what’s next.”)

Sellers: Act now or be prepared to wait–maybe several years.

Buyers: Start saving your down payment (new concept, I know–check out wikipedia or google it) and get your credit in order (another new concept for some of us, but necessary now.) Do your Christmas shopping & card writing now, & see how the economy’s doing in November–it may be time to start writing lowball offers. Or to wait another year.

Just trying to pass on our thoughts and those of others from here on Southern California real estate’s front lines.  We’d love to hear what you think.

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