The U.S. housing market is already being pounded by the “perfect
storm.” And the outlook for the New Year is for the stormy weather to
continue – and probably to get worse.
As
if a locked-up credit market and tidal waves of foreclosures weren’t
already enough, we’re now watching unemployment climb and consumer
confidence plunge.
But even when the housing market is taking on water, there are ways to stay afloat. Indeed, investors nimble enough to maneuver can even make money.
The watchword on this market, though, is caution. If an investor decides to test the waters, beware of the extraordinary financial undertow.
Here’s a look at what’s happening now, and what the implications there are for investors in the New Year.
Rising Unemployment Feeds into Sinking Demand
The grim reality is that skyrocketing unemployment is a major threat
to the recovery of the U.S. housing market. And consumers shackled
with record levels of debt are unlikely to ride to the rescue this
time.
Since this recession is expected to be long and deep, economists are projecting high rates of unemployment.
And the latest statistics released by the U.S. Labor Department show
the crucial jobs market deteriorating at an alarmingly rapid pace.
The U.S. unemployment rate jumped to a 14-year high of 6.5% in October as another 240,000 jobs were cut
– an uptick from 6.1% in September and the 10th month in a row the
jobless rate has risen. Most forecasts are calling for unemployment to
spike as high as 8.5%, which would be the worst showing since 1980.
So far this year, a staggering 1.2 million jobs have disappeared.
More than half the decrease occurred in the past three months alone, Money Morning reported in its “Outlook 2009”
series economic forecast story. Even worse: A year ago, job cuts were
concentrated in the financial-services and homebuilding sectors. Now
they’re rising across the board; virtually every part of the economy is
feeling the squeeze.
For instance:
- U.S. automaker Chrysler Corp., one of Detroit’s wheezing “Big Three,” is laying off 25% of its white-collar work force of 18,500.
- Appliance maker Whirlpool Corp. (WHR) recently announced it would cut 5,000 jobs to cope with declining sales.
- Worldwide shipping giant DHL, a subsidiary of Deutsche Post AG, is laying off 9,500 people, and threatening to close its U.S. distribution center.
- Onetime Internet search giant Yahoo! Inc. (YHOO) plans to let 1,100 workers go – on top of the 1,000 already jettisoned in January – the result of several botched merger attempts.
- Ailing banking giant Citigroup Inc. (C) heaped more bad news on the financial sector, announcing whopping 50,000 layoffs in the next 12 months.
Layoffs of this magnitude are more than a mere shot across the bow
of the housing market – they’re actually a direct hit amid ship. People
who are unemployed cannot buy homes. Period. But even consumers who are
afraid that they might be joining the jobless ranks are loath to take
on the added risk – making them unlikely candidates to buy a new home.
Foreclosures Still Rising
As unemployment climbs, foreclosures will continue to multiply. That
only exacerbates an already unappealing combination – more houses being
dumped onto the market even as the pool of potential buyers grows
increasingly smaller.
RealtyTrac Inc.
reported that more than 81,000 homes were foreclosed on in September –
71% increase from the same period just a year ago. For 2008,
foreclosures rose to a record 765,558.
“I wouldn’t be surprised to see foreclosures increase as the
economy slows down,” said Rick Sharga, RealtyTrac’s vice president of
marketing. “The people living paycheck to paycheck are at risk if they
lose their jobs. It will cause more people to lose their homes.”
And while foreclosure volumes are outpacing projections, the
cumulative losses by banks on bad mortgages may have yet to hit their
books. Since loan losses don’t get recorded until the property is
sold, it’s likely there’s a lot of bank-owned inventory that hasn’t
been unloaded – meaning there may be more foreclosures out there
investors don’t yet know about.
“We are in uncharted waters,” said Brian Bethune, an economist at research firm Global Insight (IHS).
Making the waters even rougher was the decision by Standard & Poor’s Inc.