Respecting the Median Multiple Housing Measure
Respecting the Median Multiple Housing Measure
Co author – Annual Demographia International Housing Affordability Survey
Performance Urban Planning
Christchurch
New Zealand
31 January 2011
Schooling and
Education
There is a world of difference between
being schooled in a subject and actually educated in it. As
Oscar Wilde said “Never let your schooling interfere with
you education”.
Over the past thirty years or more, thanks to the politicization of urban issues and the housing market and increased affluence allowing the growth of social science education, “schooled experts” on housing and urban issues have become more prominent in the public arena and the main stream media. Today we are deluged with policy and academic papers micro analyzing and commenting on housing markets and public policy relating to it, in language that is divorced from reality, as urban development and investment practitioners understand it.
The authors of these too often mind numbing, tedious and long winded tracts, do not know what is (a) important (b) interesting and (c) irrelevant. Most of the taxpayer financed material fits neatly in to category (c).
Developers actually build cities – urban experts don’t.
There are the “doers” in this world and the “dreamers”.
Recently, a retired senior academic of a New Zealand “social science” tertiary institution wrote to me, expressing his concerns about the standard of education in the urban planning area in particular –
“Our universities are churning
out social scientists not as informed citizens who might
then look for a career, but as people who have the
expectation that they can turn their degree in to a career.
Many of them head in to public sector employment and policy
jobs, because there is nowhere else for them to go. And any
time they are asked to look at an issue, they generate
policy recommendations that lead to regulations. Because
their knowledge is bestowed on them by weak (or doctrinaire)
teachers, they do not have the critical capacity necessary
for the job. Nevertheless, they can become part of the club
which exerts considerable power, and persists (often
becoming stronger) through changes in government. This
applies to local and central government.”
“The result is not just over regulation, but
poor regulation. Policy is based on imitation, workshops and
group think.”
“While my leanings
are (or were) more liberal than libertarian, this has led me
to the position of seeing governments as inept and
potentially a deadweight as a result of an entrenched and
pedestrian bureaucracy that has circumscribed the discretion
of the executive, ably supported by a lazy media that in
turn limits the range of issues we might debate. There are
exceptions to all of this I guess.
It’s
past time social science academics started to realize that
they have some major problems that need to be dealt with.
Too many of their students are a menace to society. Rarely
are they “wealth creators” (Bill Gates – a University
drop out – he’s not the only one).
Market Practitioners Understand the Limits of Their Knowledge
Experienced market practitioners, who’s judgment is constantly tested in the market place, are acutely aware of the limitations of their knowledge. In contrast - those who have simply been “schooled” in these issues, with “no skin in the game” or practical experience, tend to articulate issues in more certain and complex terms, creating an “aura of knowledge” that seduces the unsuspecting within politics and the media.
But Economists (and Other Social Scientists) Dont
As a further example - it is now well recognized the economics profession (the market experts supposedly) general performance in the lead up to the Global Financial Crisis was woeful. Indeed it was so bad they were “selling” property inflation as growth (as a doctor would suggest “cancer” is good for your health). I covered this issue within an article early 2009 Housing Bubbles And Market Sense . Within this article, I quoted from a Portfolio com article The End Of Wall Streets Boom , written by Michael Lewis (author of Liars Poker) , in how a few within the finance sector…….a very few…….”got it” about the dangers of the inflating housing bubbles and employed sound judgment to take advantage of the situation. Lewis wrote –
“At the end of 2004, Eisman,
Moses and Daniel’s shared a sense that unhealthy things
were going on in the housing market. Lots of firms were
lending money to people who shouldn’t have been borrowing
it. They thought that Alan Greenspan’s decision after the
internet bust to lower interest rates to 1% was a travesty
that would lead to some terrible day of reckoning. Neither
of these insights was entirely original. Ivy Zelman, at the
time the housing market analyst at Credit Suisse had seen
the bubble forming very early on. There is a simple
measure of sanity in housing prices, the ratio of median
house prices to income (my emphasis). Historically it
runs about 3 to 1, by late 2004, it had risen nationally to
4 to 1. ‘All these people were saying it was nearly as
high as some other countries’ Zelman says ‘But the
problem wasn’t just that it was 4 to 1. In Los Angeles it
was 10 to 1 and in Miami it was 8.5 to 1. And then you
coupled that with the buyers. They weren’t real buyers.
They were speculators’. Zelman alienated clients with her
pessimism, but she couldn’t pretend everything was good.
‘It wasn’t that hard in hindsight to see it’ she says
“It was very hard to know when it would stop”. Zelman
spoke occasionally with Eisman and always left these
conversations feeling better about her views and worse about
the world. ‘You needed the occasional assurance you
weren’t nuts’ she says. She wasn’t nuts. The world
was.”
Speculators Super
Profits from Political Failure
Funds
Manager John Paulson read the situation accurately, and as
this Portfolio com article from early 2009 explains John Paulson Profits In Downturn -
Executives, made $US15 billion, by taking positions to
capitalize on the downfall of the bubble markets and the
poor quality lending associated with it.
Not surprisingly (at least to market practitioners) John Paulson changed tack during early 2010 as Professor Mark Perry explains within his Capre Diem article "Big Short" Paulson Continues to Be "Big Long" –
“John Paulson, head of hedge fund
giant Paulson & Co, turned bullish on the US housing market
in early 2010. Now he’s got a fund that’s betting on a
rebound. One of the firms latest projects has taken it into
the Sonaran Desert in the American Southwest in search of
empty residential development lots. In November, the firm
finished raising capital for the Paulson Real Estate
Recovery Fund, gathering roughly $315 million in commitments
from investors.”
“One of the funds
main strategies is to buy undeveloped tracts of land that
already have environmental and building permits. Roads,
sewers and electricity may also be in place, but not homes,
according to one of the people familiar with the fund. If
the real estate market recovers enough for developers to
start building more homes, this may be the type of land they
buy first. That’s because a lot of the costly, time
consuming preparation work has already been done, the person
explained.”
Rather amusingly, Mr
Paulson is taking advantage of political failures of the
housing markets and in how politicians and planners disrupt
the normal supply of new housing. No doubt he will be
selecting his markets carefully, where the greatest
“planning disruption” costs are - to maximize his
profits going forward. Disruptive urban planners are a
speculators best friend.
U.S. National Association of Realtors Respects Median Multiple Measure
The United States National Association of Realtors within a recent release Global Survey: U.S. Homes Are Most Affordable has alerted its large membership within the affordable markets –
“United States real
estate offers a lot of bang for your buck, according to a
new survey that shows U.S. homes are the cheapest relative
to incomes among English speaking nations.”
“Australian homes – which have a median price
of $454,000 – were found to be the most unaffordable among
English speaking nations, according to the report by
consulting firm Demographia, which examined affordability in
the third quarter of 2010. The median home in Australia
costs 6.1 times the gross annual median household
income…………..”
On the
other hand, U.S homes have a median home price of $168,000
and homes cost only three times yearly income or
less.”(my emphasis).
“
‘Australia has gone from being ‘the exemplar of modestly
priced high quality middle-class housing, to now the most
unaffordable housing market in the English speaking
world,’ the report noted ‘Each of the least affordable
markets were characterized by more restrictive land use
regulation, which materially increases the price of land and
makes housing less affordable’ “.
“The United States boasted the most affordable
markets. Atlanta was the most affordable big city, in which
the median home price is $129,000.”
“Meanwhile, the most unaffordable markets in
the US were mostly found in California, San Francisco (homes
cost 7.2 times income), San Jose (6.7 times), San Diego (6.2
times). New York (6.1 times) and Los Angeles (5.9
times).”
No Mystery About Affordable
Housing
There is nothing at all
“mysterious” or “new” about the provision of new
affordable housing – and importantly, the capacity of the
construction industry to meet demand. Much of this issue is
about relearning history (something academics would be well
advised to do). The great construction industry entrepreneur
William Levitt, ‘the father of suburbia” following
World War 11 (as this 1950 Time magazine article explains HOUSING: Up from the Potato Fields -
TIME) provided new homes for $US8,000 to single earner
families on $US3,800 per year – 2.1 times annual single
earner household income.
Artificially induced
housing bubbles and the housing affordability problems
associated with them are simply an unnecessary
nonsense.
The 2011 7th Annual Demographia International Housing
Affordability Survey (Media Release) of the Medan Multiples of
325 major urban markets of the English speaking world,
including Hong Kong were – Hong Kong (1 market) 11.4;
Australia (32) 6.1; New Zealand (8) 5.3; United Kingdom
(33) 5.2; Ireland (5) 4.0; Canada (35) 3.4 and the United
States (211) 3.0.
All the 115 affordable housing
markets (at or below 3.0 times annual household incomes)
were in Canada (9) and the United States (106). As were
nearly all the 94 moderately unaffordable markets (at or
below 4.0 times annual household incomes) – with 74 in the
United States, 17 in Canada and 3 in Ireland following its
housing crash.
It is likely now the local
business, real estate and residential builder associations
of the affordable markets, with their members within both
Canada and the United States, will follow the lead of the US
National Association of Realtors, in using the
Demographia Surveys to promote their markets.
Already this is happening on real estate agents blogs (here, here, here).
Normal Affordable Housing Market Defined
The Median Multiple measure is an essential foundation in understanding what a normal affordable housing market is. The following definition is on the writers website Performance Urban Planning –
“For metropolitan areas to rate as ‘affordable’
and ensure that housing bubbles are not triggered, housing
prices should not exceed 3 times gross annual median
household incomes. To allow this to occur, new starter
housing of an acceptable quality to the purchasers, with
associated commercial and industrial development, must be
allowed to be provided on the urban fringes at 2.5 times the
gross annual median household income of that urban
market.”
“The fringe is the only
supply or inflation vent for an urban market.”
“The critically important Development Ratios
for this new fringe starter housing, should be 17 – 23%
serviced lot / section cost – the balance the actual
housing construction.”
“Ideally
through a normal building cycle, the Median Multiple should
move from a Floor Multiple of 2.3 through a Swing Multiple
of 2.5 to a Ceiling Multiple of 2.7 – to ensure maximum
stability and optimal medium and long term performance of
the residential construction sector.”
Scarcity or perceived scarcity is the “trigger”
of housing bubbles – finance is simply the “fuel”, as
I explained within an article mid 2010 Americans Slow Learners About Housing
Bubbles. Within this article I drew to readers
attention, an important speech to the U.S.Real Estate
Editors Conference, given by Mike Insulmann, co founder and
President of the respected US construction industry research
firm Metrostudy. Mr Insulmann was particularly concerned the
“public conversation” of these issues has yet to take
place in California and other US bubble markets. In
contrast, this important conversation has been underway in
New Zealand and Australia for a number of years.
New Market Stock and Bubble Stock
Generally, as the Annual Demographia
International Housing Affordability Surveys clearly
illustrate, most of Texas urban markets stayed within the
mid to high 2.0 Median Multiples. Some such as Austin went a
little higher, and no doubt the State of Texas authorities
are examining why this has happened, requiring that local
government to sort out its regulatory costs.
Texas has a sound mix of open market policies with appropriate infrastructure financing (bond financing Municipal Utility District model) and sensible Mortgage Consumer Protection laws as this article explains - The Lone Star Secret - CNBC.
The State of Georgia too has open land markets, but no Mortgage Consumer Protection Law, as Professor Paul Krugman explained within a New York Times article back in April 2010 - Georgia on my mind. Not surprisingly, the lax lending in Georgia led to over production of new housing stock – but not a bubble. Last years Demographia Survey illustrates how the Median Multiple for Atlanta fell to 2.1 – this year it has moved to 2.3 Median Multiple, as this over production is being cleared.
Over production of “market stock” is far less of a problem than an artificial scarcity induced housing bubble and the “bubble stock” generated.
New “market stock” is housing construction of (a) the type the market wants (b) where it wants it and (c) within sound Development Ratios. In contrast – new “bubble stock” is (a) where people don’t want it but the planners force it to be (b) of the type real buyers – not speculators – don’t want and (c) outside sound and normal Development Ratios. Miami is an excellent example of the latter. Ireland too.
Focus on Simple Structural Issues
It is clear those “schooled” in urban issues and housing must start thinking the way market participants do. Mirror the market – not be divorced from it. Within an early 2008 paper Getting performance urban planning in place, the writer explained the major political drivers triggering unnecessary and destructive housing bubbles and the importance of getting sound and clearly understood performance measures inculcated in to local government culture. Academics within the fields of economics, urban planning and property appraisal / valuation need to play their part in assisting in restoring housing affordability, by teaching and researching structural urban economics – from the foundation of the critically important Median Multiple measure.
ENDS