Eric Basmajian Profile picture
Nov 28, 2023 18 tweets 6 min read Read on X
The price of newly constructed homes is falling sharply.

The median price of a new home fell to $409,300 in October, down more than 17% from a peak of $496,800.

This dynamic is not the same in the existing home market...

Let's explore the difference.

1/ Image
New construction sales come from homebuilders where the business is to build and sell homes.

Like any business, you can't hold too much inventory. When inventory piles up, you have to move units at discounted prices.

Existing home sales come from regular working people.

2/
The best measure in the housing market is the "months supply" or how many months of inventory there is at the current pace of sales.

This measure takes both supply and demand into account.

3/
A months supply above 6 = too much inventory and negative price pressure coming.

A months supply below 6 = tight inventory and upward price pressure.

The new and existing markets generally tracked each other for many years but the inventory situation diverged after COVID

4/ Image
The new home market has had a months supply above 6 for almost two years straight.

This means homebuilders have an urgency to move units at discounted prices.

The existing market has been historically tight so prices have remained very sticky.

5/ Image
The new home market almost always moves first as builders have a business of building and moving inventory.

The long-term chart of new home months supply shows an extended period above 6 so there should be no surprise there's price pressure.

6/ Image
In fact, we started writing there would be negative price pressure for new homes back in late 2022.

7/ Image
Looking at history, we can see the accumulated price pressure by looking at the consecutive months that the months supply was above or below 6.

The months supply of new homes was below 6 for 115 consecutive months from 1996 to 2006.

Insane upward price pressure.

8/ Image
There were also two pockets more recently from 2011 to 2014 and from 2015 to 2017 where there was a lot of upward price pressure from very tight homebuilder supply.

9/ Image
On the flip side, we can see periods when there was a persistent oversupply of new construction and that led to a price decline every time.

The months supply of new homes has been above 6 for 21 months and we've seen a 15%-18% correction in new home prices.

10/ Image
So we're seeing a massive divergence between new home pricing and existing home pricing.

New home price valuations (price to income) have come down sharply from record levels while existing home valuations are still sky-high.

11/ Image
Most people will say "home prices are still high where I live."

This could be true.

Not all areas of the country have a lot of new construction.

Where I live, in the northeast, there is virtually no new construction so all we see is the existing market and high prices.

12/
In the areas with a lot of new construction, the price declines have bled into the existing market because there's an alternative.

This shows the price changes for the existing market based on Case-Shiller data.

Upper left = peak prices

Lower right = declining prices

13/ Image
There are some regions with political difficulties but Las Vegas, Phoenix, Denver, and Dallas generally have high volumes of new construction and the existing markets have softened in those areas.

14/ Image
All in all, the best predictor of prices is the months supply.

The existing market, on average, is still tight.

But the new market has accumulated a lot of price pressure with months supply above 6 for 21 months.

15/ Image
The current months supply is 7.8 and trending up so this price pressure for new homes won't subside in the near term.

The existing market will remain very tight until the unemployment rate jumps strongly and forces inventory to market.

16/
If you're in an area with new construction, it's a buyer's market with home valuations roughly back to the long-run average with good chances you can buy with below-average valuations.

If you only see the existing market, you're still looking at stretched home prices.

17/17
Here's median sales price vs. medial sales price / median sq ft started.

18/17 Image

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Eric Basmajian

Eric Basmajian Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @EPBResearch

Apr 21
New residential building permits is one of the best leading indicators of recessions.

Here's how you can easily make it even better.

(And what it's saying now)...

1/
Building permits are a great leading indicator because they are an early step in the residential construction process.

We know that residential construction is a critical part of the business cycle, so getting an early lead on this is important.

2/ Image
Big declines in building permits lead recessions because it anticipates declines in construction activity and therefore, residential construction related employment.

3/
Read 13 tweets
Apr 9
Tariffs on, tariffs off.

No one knows the next policy move.

But here's the economic reality of how tariffs impact the economy and why they should be used carefully...🧵

1/
The arguments or the stated goals of tariff policy are clear – protecting current American jobs from unfair foreign competition, reshoring manufacturing plants and high-paying jobs, and closing large trade deficits.

2/
However, the economic reality of tariffs is unlikely to achieve these goals for the following reasons.

3/
Read 11 tweets
Mar 31
The labor market is holding together on the surface, but concerning details appear under the hood.

No quitting and no hiring, but also no firing yet.

Here's the real story behind the US labor market.

1/
To start, the health and vibrance of the labor market comes from the goods economy of construction and manufacturing.

So this is where we focus.

If you need a primer on why, check this out:

2/
When we look at the BLS employment report, the combination of construction & manufacturing continues to increase.

If these cyclical jobs were declining, that would be a major step towards recession.

So far, they are increasing, which is a good thing.

3/ Image
Read 14 tweets
Mar 17
Real retail sales are now lower than the pre-pandemic trend line.

Real sales volume has moved sideways for over two years!

Is the consumer in trouble?

1/ Image
Retail sales are reported in nominal dollars, or including inflation.

Historically, retail sales increased at a 4.2% annualized pace.

About 2% of that was price, and 2% was unit growth.

2/ Image
The COVID demand shock happened, and retail sales exploded, rising 17% above trend by the summer of 2022.

3/ Image
Read 10 tweets
Mar 6
Q1 GDP growth is estimated at -2.4% per the Atlanta Fed.

Is a recession hitting now?

Here's what's actually going on 👇

1/ Image
First, the Atlanta Fed GDPNow model is a rolling estimate that gets better with more data.

So at the start of a quarter, the model is mostly estimates and the GDP output is not accurate.

As the estimated data gets replaced with real numbers, the model is more accurate.

2/
Secondly, GDP is comprised of four major components:

1) Personal consumption
2) Investment
3) Government Spending
4) Net exports

A recession is driven by categories 1 & 2.

3/
Read 12 tweets
Feb 22
Durable goods are the most high-powered, high-velocity area of personal spending.

This includes:

- Motor vehicles & parts
- Home Furnishings
- Recreational Vehicles

We still haven't fully reversed the surge of durables spending after the pandemic.

Here's why it matters.

1/ Image
The economy has four primary categories:

- Private consumption
- Private investment
- Net exports
- Government spending

2/ Image
The "Duncan Leading Index" involves tracking three narrow segments of the economy:

- Durable goods consumption
- Residential investment
- Non-residential investment

3/ Image
Read 10 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(