(Source: Tulsa World)

By CAROLINE BAUM
With U.S. home prices back down to their 2009 lows, you might be
wondering what all the government programs to stabilize the housing
market have accomplished.
And for good reason. Various federal initiatives, especially the
first-time homebuyer's tax credit, seemed to put a brake on the
three-year dive in prices from July 2006, the peak, to April 2009.
Home sales and prices bounced, only to hit the skids when the
program ended in April 2010. Which is what you'd expect when the
government stops cutting checks for $8,000.
Was the two-year respite worth it? Would prices have fallen
harder and faster if left to their own devices and now be showing
signs of stabilization?
It sure seems that way. Instead, two years and billions of
dollars later, home prices are back to their 2009 lows, according to
the S&P Case-Shiller Index for February.
There are a couple of reasons to think that, without
intervention, the housing market would have "cleared" by now, and
that buyers would be attracted by falling prices rather than
taxpayer dollars.
First, a home price index constructed by CoreLogic, a real-
estate research firm in Santa Ana, Calif., shows signs that home
prices are stabilizing. Unlike Case-Shiller, CoreLogic's index
excludes distressed sales, which are driving the declines in certain
markets.
The other piece of evidence is a case study by Tom Lawler,
president of Lawler Economic & Housing Consulting LLC in Leesburg,
Va., that, just coincidentally, tests my hypothesis.
In "A Tale of Two Counties," Lawler compares two Washington metro
areas: Prince William County, Va., and Prince George's County, Md.
Both counties witnessed rapid home-price appreciation during the
housing boom. Both had higher-than-average shares of subprime
mortgages. And both saw prices take a dive from their 2006 peak.
Today, home prices in Prince William County are above the 2009
lows, while those in Prince George's County still are declining. The
difference seems to be the speed with which foreclosed homes were
resold.
Virginia has one of the fastest foreclosure timelines in the
nation, according to Lawler. House prices fell faster, and
inventories were reduced more quickly, in Virginia than in Maryland,
where judicial and legislative actions are drawing out the process.
Lawler admits his study isn't conclusive. It does support the
idea that the faster prices are allowed to fall, the faster unsold
inventory can be allocated, and the sooner the market will find its
equilibrium.
That's not much consolation to all the underwater homeowners.
Maybe their children will live to see equity in the home
regained. Once the supply and demand dynamics that affect home
values in the short run are aligned, good old-fashioned economic
fundamentals, such as income growth and housing affordability, come
into play, according to Sam Khater, senior economist at CoreLogic.
On that score, there's little reason to expect much of a bounce.
Real incomes have been stagnant since the late 1990s, according to
Khater. Housing may be affordable now, thanks to depressed prices
and low mortgage rates, but interest rates will eventually rise. At
the same time, "the rules of the game are changing," with tighter
standards imposed for both underwriting and securitizing of
mortgages, he says.
CoreLogic looked at regions of the country that experienced the
biggest housing busts of the past: the oil-patch states, including
Texas and Colorado, in the early to mid-1980s; southern California
in the late 1980s-early 1990s, following the savings and loan
crisis; and New England, also in the late 1980s-early 1990s. In
these cases, it took three to five years for house prices to bottom
and six to eight years to reach pre-bust levels, Khater reports.
The only good news for housing is that Washington is now
preoccupied with reducing the deficit. Even if it wanted to, the
federal government doesn't have the resources to throw good money
after bad.
Caroline Baum is a Bloomberg News columnist.
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