Title: Where Are We In The Business Cycle
1 Where Are We In The Business Cycle What Are
The Implications For U.S. Economy Home
Builders?
Mark Vitner Director and Senior
Economist Wachovia Corporation May 22, 2007
2Will The Next Ten Years Be As Good For
Homebuilders As The Last Ten Years Have Been?
- No! Home Sales During The Past Ten Years Were
Fueled By A Tidal Wave Of Liquidity That
Probably Will Not Be Present For The Next Ten
Years. - Ten Years Ago Housing Was A Bargain, Today
Affordability Is Still Stretched In Many Major
Markets. - While Home Sales New Construction Will Not
Likely Match The Last Ten Years, Demographics Are
Still Extremely Positive. - The U.S. Is Still Adding 3 Million People A Year,
Mostly In The South West - A Larger Share Of Home Sales In The Coming Decade
Will Come From Minorities And Immigrants
3There Is No Monster In The Closet Or Under The
Bed. The Next Recession Is Still Years Away
Subprime Worries Are Overblown
- We Are In The Midst Of A Mid-Cycle Adjustment.
This Expansion Is Now 5 1/2 Years Old And The
Drivers Are Changing. - Home Sales Peaked About 20 Months Are Now A
Little More Than Half Way Through A Major
Correction - Consumer Spending Is Growing More Modestly Due To
Slower Home Price Appreciation Higher Fuel
Prices - Two Thirds Of The Adjustable Rate Mortgages That
Were Scheduled To Price Up In 2007 Have Already
Been Refinanced - Auto Plant Shutdowns Are Decimating The Midwest
Making Capex Appear Weaker Than It Actually Is. -
4The Bulk Of The Problem With Subprime Mortgages
Are In Loans Made After Home Sales Peaked
5The Brief Late Fall Pick Up In Home Sales Likely
Pulled Sales Forward From This Spring
6The Sharpest Correction Has Occurred In Markets
Where Investor Activity Was Highest When Sales
Peaked
7There Are Plenty Of Existing Homes On The
Market, Including Investor Homes
8The Inventory Of Unsold Homes Remains High But Is
No Longer Rising
9The Historic Run-Up In Home Prices Has Ended, But
Fears Of Price Collapse Are Way Overdone
10Housing Starts Have Not Bottomed Out Yet But The
Bottom Is Not Too Far Off
11Where Will Housing Settle In, With 7 Mortgage
Rates, Or An 8 Rate?
12Housing Affordability Is Still Reasonably High
But Not Where It Was Earlier
13Mortgage Payments Still Take A Larger Proportion
Of Income Than They Did A Few Years Ago
14Homeownership Has Stalled As Home Prices Have
Surged Mortgage Rates Stopped Falling
15Soaring Housing Prices Are Causing Businesses To
Reevaluate Location Decisions
- Population Growth Has Slowed Significantly In
California, Florida, New Jersey Northern
Virginia - The Big Winners Are Arizona, Texas, Georgia The
Carolinas - Foreign-owned Automobile Producers Are Setting Up
Shop In The Deep South Growth Will Now Be
Driven By Suppliers - East Coast Ports Are Bumping Up Against Capacity
Constraints, Leading To Major Expansions (FL, GA,
SC, NC, VA, NY/NJ) - Output In The High Tech Sector Is Strengthening
But More Of The Growth Will Occur Away From
California, Boston DC - Biotech Development Is Just Getting Up To Speed
And Will Go Way Beyond Medicine and Disease
Detection.
16Income Drives Consumer Spending, The Wealth
Effect Will Likely Produce Only A Modest Drag On
Sales
17Growth Has Moderated And Will Likely Remain
Between 2 and 2 ½ For The Next Few Quarters
18Hiring Has Moderated Recently But Hiring Still
Remains Reasonably Strong
19The Unemployment Rate Is Showing Signs Of
Bottoming Out, We Expect A Modest Rise In Coming
Months
20Business Fixed Investment Has Been Depressed In
Areas Tied To Housing, Autos, Heavy Trucks
21Factory Orders Suggest That Investment Will
Remain Weak, The Trend May Be Overstated
22The Fed Is On Hold For The Next Few Months.
Monetary Policy Is A Bit Tight.
23All Of That Extra Liquidity Is Helping Hold Down
Long-Term Interest Rates
24Economic Forecast