Many investors, economists and policymakers have doubted the strength of the U.S. housing market, largely due to skyrocketing mortgage rates and plummeting affordability.
The near-term dynamics that drive the housing cycle are sending mixed signals today, with prices higher even as sales have been depressed. But I believe longer term trends point to solid growth in housing over the next decade.
People need a place to live, and home ownership remains a centerpiece of the American dream. But I also spend time looking for the lonely investment idea.
And in my view, housing stands out as one of the more underappreciated growth markets in the U.S. economy today.
Here are three reasons why:
1. New home construction hasn’t kept pace
Simply put, new construction has not stepped up to meet demand. By my estimate we may have a housing shortfall today of as many as five million homes. The number of households in the U.S. increased by 1.65 million in March. Non-replacement housing starts, a measure of new housing units being built, stood at 889,000, year over year, in March.
This gap between supply and demand extends a trend that has lasted more than a decade, except for a volatile period between 2021 and 2022 in the
wake of the pandemic. In other words, we have underinvested in new
We will need to see at least 1.5 million to 1.6 million new home starts each year just to keep up with population growth. That doesn’t include a potential 300,000 to 400,000 homes that are demolished each year. This suggests the potential for a significant boost in residential construction activity for years.
2. The “lock-in” effect could drive more construction
Higher mortgage rates have created distortions in the supply-demand picture that could provide tailwinds for new home construction in the near term. As the Federal Reserve hiked short-term interest rates 11 times in 2022 and 2023, mortgage rates soared and existing home sales plummeted from an annualized rate of 6.4 million in January 2022 to a rate of 3.8 million in October 2023, a 28-year low.
The smaller supply of existing homes for sale provides an additional tailwind for new home construction in the near term. Homebuilders are scrambling to begin new construction to meet the supply shortfall.
Although much has been written about an affordability crisis, mortgage rates are not extreme by historical standards. It’s worth remembering that in the 1970s and 1980s, when mortgage rates were in the double digits, the housing market remained healthy as millions of baby boomers made initial home purchases. And that was in a period when the U.S. population was around 230 million versus about 340 million today.
Today, I see similarly positive dynamics, with more millennials beginning to buy their first homes, a post-pandemic desire for bigger single-family homes, and the construction lag throughout the 2010s. I also believe homebuyers will ultimately adjust to a new environment of higher rates and prices.
housing.
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