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U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference
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U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

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Page 1: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook

David CroweChief Economist

April 4, 2013NALHFA Annual Educational Conference

Page 2: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

Outline

Macro Economy

Demographics (i.e., demand)

Housing Stock and Flow (i.e., supply

Forecasts

Markets

Page 3: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

Macro

Page 4: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

Real GDP Growth – Hesitated in Q4, but expected to improve

0%

200%

400%

600%

800%

1000%

1200%Q/Q Percent Change, SAAR

Last 4 Qs Avg = 1.7%

1.8%

2.6%

Page 5: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

GDP and Housing in RecoveryHousing component now growing faster than economy

Jun-09

Sep-09

Dec-09

Mar-10

Jun-10

Sep-10

Dec-10

Mar-11

Jun-11

Sep-11

Dec-11

Mar-12

Jun-12

Sep-12

Dec-12

-30%

-25%

-20%

-15%

-10%

-5%

0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

4.1%2.0% 1.3%

3.1%0.4%

12.0%

20.6%

8.4%

13.6%

17.5%

GDP RFI

An

nu

al C

ha

ng

e Be

gin

nin

g o

f R

ec

ov

ery

En

d o

f b

uye

r cr

edit

Page 6: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

Payroll Employment – A little over half-way back to peak

00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13125,000

128,000

131,000

134,000

137,000

140,000

143,000

138056

129360

135046

Trend in employmentTotal employment

Millions

Page 7: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

Unemployment Will Remain High

00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 130

2

4

6

8

10

12Percent, Seasonally Adjusted

Page 8: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

Improving Markets Index – at 273 markets in April

Page 9: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

Demographics (i.e., Demand)

Page 10: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

Population by Single-Year of AgeRising population in prime household formation years

0123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100+0.0

500,000.0

1,000,000.0

1,500,000.0

2,000,000.0

2,500,000.0

3,000,000.0

3,500,000.0

4,000,000.0

4,500,000.0

5,000,000.04,592,336.0

3,827,920.0

Millions

Born 1979 or later Born 1965-78 Born 1946-64 Born 1945 or earlier

He

ad

sh

ip r

ate

s i

nc

rea

se

fro

m 1

6%

to

48

%

Page 11: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

Household Formations Are on the RiseYear-over-year change in households rising again

02

02

02

02

03

03

03

03

04

04

04

04

05

05

05

05

06

06

06

06

07

07

07

07

08

08

08

08

09

09

09

09

10

10

10

10

11

11

11

11

12

12

12

12

0

500

1,000

1,500

2,000

2,500Thousands

Avg: 1.38 million

Avg: 0.5 million

Avg: 0.86 million

Page 12: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

Annual Average Household Changes – Switch to Renting

2002-2005 2007-2010 2011-2012-400

-200

0

200

400

600

800

1,000

1,200

1,400

1,6001,384

522

863

164

676

1,034

Total Owners Renters

Page 13: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

Homeownership Rates by Age GroupDecline from peak 2 to 6.9 percentage points

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

Under 25 (down 3.1 pts)

25-34 (down 6.9 pts)

92 94 96 98 00 02 04 06 08 1060

65

70

75

80

50+ (down 2 pts)

35-49 (down 5.5 pts)

Page 14: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.
Page 15: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

Housing Stock and Flow (i.e., supply)

Page 16: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

Stock of Homes by Building Size Share of 2-4 unit buildings falling in stock, but flow significantly different

1970 1980 1990 2000 2011 2012YTD Flow

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

72% 70% 71% 72% 74% 68%

14% 12% 10% 10% 8%

1%

15% 18% 19% 18% 18%30%

SF 2 to 4 5+

Page 17: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 201115%

20%

25%

30%

35%

40%

45%

50%

30%

34%

43%43%

Single family 2-4 5+

Share of Rental Units by Building SizeRising share of rentals coming from single-family stock

Page 18: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

Share of Production For RentSingle-family and multifamily rising

19741976

19781980

19821984

19861988

19901992

19941996

19982000

20022004

20062008

20102012

50%

55%

60%

65%

70%

75%

80%

85%

90%

95%

0%

1%

2%

3%

4%

5%

6%

Multifamily Single-family

Page 19: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

Rental Production and JobsProduction generally follows job market changes

Mar-74

Oct-75

May-77

Dec-78Jul-8

0

Feb-82

Sep-83

Apr-85

Nov-86

Jun-88

Jan-90

Aug-91

Mar-93

Oct-94

May-96

Dec-97Jul-9

9

Feb-01

Sep-02

Apr-04

Nov-05

Jun-07

Jan-09

Aug-10

Mar-12

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

(2.50)

(2.00)

(1.50)

(1.00)

(0.50)

-

0.50

1.00

1.50

2.00 MF Rental Starts Chg in Employment

100 jobs = 74 apartments

Page 20: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

But, Linkage ChangesDuring high direct and tax incentives, strong relationship

Mar-74

Aug-74

Jan-75

Jun-75

Nov-75

Apr-76

Sep-76

Feb-77Jul-7

7

Dec-77

May-78

Oct-78

Mar-79

Aug-79

Jan-80

Jun-80

Nov-80

Apr-81

Sep-81

Feb-82Jul-8

2

Dec-82

May-83

Oct-83

Mar-84

Aug-840

100

200

300

400

500

600

-2

-1

0

1

2

Rental Starts Emplm Chg

100 jobs = 83 apartments

(000s) %

Page 21: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

Lower Linkage in 1990sDuring readjustment to different subsidies

Mar-90

Aug-90

Jan-91

Jun-91

Nov-91

Apr-92

Sep-92

Feb-93Jul-9

3

Dec-93

May-94

Oct-94

Mar-95

Aug-95

Jan-96

Jun-96

Nov-96

Apr-97

Sep-97

Feb-98Jul-9

8

Dec-98

May-99

Oct-99

Mar-00

Aug-000

50

100

150

200

250

300

350

400

-0.6

-0.4

-0.2

0.0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1.0

1.2

Rental Starts Emplm Chg

(000s) %

100 jobs = 40 apartments

Page 22: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

Relationship disrupted Slow 2002 economic recovery and likely switch to condos

Mar-01

Jun-01

Sep-01

Dec-01

Mar-02

Jun-02

Sep-02

Dec-02

Mar-03

Jun-03

Sep-03

Dec-03

Mar-04

Jun-04

Sep-04

Dec-04

Mar-05

Jun-05

Sep-05

Dec-05

Mar-06

Jun-06

Sep-060

50

100

150

200

250

300

350

-1.0

-0.8

-0.6

-0.4

-0.2

0.0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1.0

Rental Starts Emplm Chg

100 jobs = 130 apartments

%(000s)

Page 23: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

Back to Normal?As job growth slowly returns, rental starts moving up

Mar-10

May-10Jul-1

0

Sep-10

Nov-10

Jan-11

Mar-11

May-11Jul-1

1

Sep-11

Nov-11

Jan-12

Mar-12

May-12Jul-1

2

Sep-12

Nov-120

50

100

150

200

250

300

-0.2

0.0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1.0

Rental Starts Emplm Chg

100 jobs = 39 apartments

%(000s)

Page 24: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

ForecastsRemodelingMultifamilySingle family

Page 25: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

Remodeling Market Index (RMI)Above 50 for 1 quarter

20

01

Q1

Q3

20

02

Q1

Q3

20

03

Q1

Q3

20

04

Q1

Q3

20

05

Q1

Q3

20

06

Q1

Q3

20

07

Q1

Q3

20

08

Q1

Q3

20

09

Q1

Q3

20

10

Q1

Q3

20

11

Q1

Q3

20

12

Q1

Q3

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

55

6055

Page 26: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

Residential Remodeling – Strong Finish to 2012

93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 1460,000

70,000

80,000

90,000

100,000

110,000

120,000

130,000

140,000

150,000

YR 4Q/4Q Chg -0.7% 7.4% 2.2% 1.6%

Billions 2005 $, SAAR

Page 27: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

Multifamily Production Index38-point increase in four years; above 50 for 4 quarters

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

55

60

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

350

400

5+ Starts (R)

NAHB MMI (L)

16

54

(000s)

Page 28: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

1995-2003 331,000 2010 114,0002011 178,000 56%2012 247,000 39%2013 312,000 26%2014 331,000 6%

00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 140

50

100

150

200

250

300

350

400

450

500

550Thousands

76% fall

Multifamily Housing Starts Healthy Response from Growth in Renters

Trough to Current:4th Q 09 = 82,0004th Q 12 = 312,000

280%

2012Q4 = 92% of “Normal”

Page 29: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

Distribution of Multifamily Starts by Type

2008 2009 2010 2011 2012F 2013F 2014F0

50

100

150

200

250

300

350

67

18 17 19 23 32 39

18

12 11 12 11 16

19

44

25 2545

59

7478

155

57 61

102

154

190 195

Condo 2 - 4 LIHTC Mkt 5+

331Thousands

112 114

178

284

247

312

Page 30: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index - 30 point rise since September 2011

Jan-05

Jul-05

Jan-06

Jul-06

Jan-07

Jul-07

Jan-08

Jul-08

Jan-09

Jul-09

Jan-10

Jul-10

Jan-11

Jul-11

Jan-12

Jul-12

Jan-13

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

0

200

400

600

800

1,000

1,200

1,400

1,600

1,800

2,000

14

Single-family starts (R)

HMI (L)

(000s)

8

44

Page 31: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

2000-2003 1,300,000 ”Normal”2010 471,000 2011 434,000 -8%2012 534,000 23%2013 664,000 24%2014 855,000 29%

00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 140

200

400

600

800

1,000

1,200

1,400

1,600

1,800

2,000Thousands

80% fall

Single-Family Starts – Beginning a Recovery

Trough to Current:Mar 09 = 353,000Feb 13 = 618,000

+75%

2012Q4 = 44% of “Normal’

2014Q4=71%

Page 32: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

Markets

Page 33: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

Top Multifamily Markets: Now and ThenTotal Housing Permits (yellow shaded on both lists)

Top Ten Multifamily Markets 2012Top Ten Multifamily Markets 2000-2002

1 New York 1 New York

2 Dallas-Fort Worth 2 Miami

3 Houston 3 Chicago

4 Los Angeles 4 Los Angeles

5 Washington 5 Dallas-Fort Worth

6 Austin 6 Denver

7 Seattle 7 Washington

8 Denver 8 Phoenix

9 Miami 9 Houston

10 Raleigh 10 Seattle

Page 34: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

State Markets Nearest ‘Normal’Ratio of 2012 Multifamily permit levels to 2000-2002 annual average

2012 MF Permits/2000-2002 Avg MF Permits

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA 4.11 TENNESSEE 1.04

NORTH DAKOTA 3.49 MONTANA 1.02

DELAWARE 2.64 OKLAHOMA 1.00

CONNECTICUT 2.17 NEBRASKA 0.96

TEXAS 1.44 OREGON 0.96

WYOMING 1.42 WASHINGTON 0.95

HAWAII 1.39 ALABAMA 0.94

SOUTH DAKOTA 1.34 NEW MEXICO 0.90

NEW JERSEY 1.33 VERMONT 0.86

MASSACHUSETTS 1.29 UTAH 0.86

MARYLAND 1.05 PENNSYLVANIA 0.85

NORTH CAROLINA 1.05 MINNESOTA 0.82

KENTUCKY 1.05 UNITED STATES 0.75

Page 35: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

Metro Markets Nearest ‘Normal’Ratio of 2012 Multifamily permit levels to 2000-2002 annual average

2012 MF Permits/2000-2002 Avg MF Permits

San Angelo TX 52.80 Tulsa OK 1.51

Dover DE 6.46 Charleston-North Charleston SC 1.48

Harrisonburg VA 6.21 Austin-Round Rock TX 1.42

Odessa TX 6.17 Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington TX 1.42

Birmingham-Hoover AL 2.34 Boston-Cambridge-Quincy MA-NH 1.38

Honolulu HI 2.29 San Francisco-Oakland-Fremont CA 1.34

Columbia SC 2.21 Des Moines IA 1.30

Raleigh-Cary NC 2.18 Wilmington NC 1.26

Laredo TX 2.08 Fort Wayne IN 1.25 Nashville-Davidson--Murfreesboro TN 1.81

Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington PA-NJ-DE-MD 1.22

Trenton-Ewing NJ 1.80 Richmond VA 1.21

Houston-Baytown-Sugar Land TX 1.63 San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara CA 1.18

Tulsa OK 1.51 UNITED STATES 0.75

Page 36: U.S. Economic & Housing Outlook David Crowe Chief Economist April 4, 2013 NALHFA Annual Educational Conference.

Questions?Answers: www.housingeconomics.comeyeonhousing.wordpress.comdcrowe@nahb.org