Shortage of homes in the future

Shortage of homes in the future

Article I found on CNNmoney.com. Talking about a strong possiblity of a housing shortage when the job market rebounds.

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- As the nation struggles to shrug off the worst housing crash since the Great Depression, it may be hard to believe a housing shortage could be on its way.

The nation is simply not building enough homes to keep up with potential demand. Just 672,000 new homes were started in April, an annualized rate and less than half the long-term run rate needed to meet the nation's natural population growth.

It is ironic, but there is a growing consensus that there may be a new housing shortage coming," said James Gaines, a real estate economist with Texas A&M.

So far, the shortfall has been masked by a weak economy that has put a damper on home buying. Once the job market rebounds, however, people will look to have their own homes again. This pent-up demand could get unleashed on unprepared markets, causing shortages and rising local prices.

Household formation -- the technical term for people moving in together -- has been on hold during the past few years as young people, especially, have been unable to find jobs. In the past, an average of more than 1.3 million households were formed each year, causing demand for 1.5 million new homes. (More homes than households are needed to replace those destroyed by fires, floods, teardowns and neglect.)

In 2009, only 398,000 new households were formed, according to the Census Bureau. That is much lower than average and a quarter of the number formed just two years earlier.

"The decline in household formation is artificial," said Gaines. "The young are moving in with their parents. There's even doubling up among working class people. There's a pent-up demand coming if and when the economy recovers."

Those doubting a new bubble is near point to a large inventory overhang. As many as 7 million homes are vacant but not for sale, according to the Census Bureau, which should provide cushion to offset increased demand.

"The housing market hasn't been this way before," said Nicolas Retsinas, director of Harvard's Joint Center for Housing Studies. "The gravity of the problem is deeper and the challenges different. You have to get through that inventory."

The inventory number, however, can be deceiving for two reasons: People may not want to live in hard-hit areas where the houses are (think: California exurbs and Detroit neighborhoods) or the homes may be beyond repair.

"Many of these vacant homes may not be habitable or are in locations where nobody wants to live," Gaines said.

Building out of the lowsOrdinarily, the nation's homebuilders can react quickly to meet surges in demand. But several factors are preventing them from being nimble. The biggest is the difficulty getting loans, according to Jerry Howard, CEO of the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB).

"When we came out of past recessions, there wasn't the difficulty of obtaining financing that there is now," he said.

Many small builders have been unable to obtain construction loans or lost their financing in mid-project. That has prodded NAHB to support federal legislation that would make $15 billion in lending guarantees available for private builders.

Hard times also persuaded builders to postpone purchases of land they could prep for future development. It will take them that much longer to gear up production once the housing market improves.

Too, many builders went out of business in the bust, so there will be fewer companies out there to do the building. The survivors will confront a transformed regulatory environment, according to Howard, that will make new homes harder to build and more expensive.

"There is an increased focus on smart growth that will create regulatory barriers to the kind of sprawling development that has characterized a lot of recent building," said Retsinas.

The regulations come under two categories, according to Susan Asmus, NAHB's senior vice president for advocacy, covering where new homes are built and how they're built.

One category is storm water runoff. The Environmental Protection Agency tightened requirement governing how builders handle that. Builders will have to install controls such as catchments or retaining ponds that slow the flow of storm runoff into the local watersheds.

"It could add as much as $15,000 to $30,000 an acre in extra costs, depending on the soil," said Asmus.

Another proposed regulation mandates sprinkler systems in each new home. This is already state law, starting January 2011, in California, Maryland and New Jersey. That adds as much as $10,000 to the cost of construction.

Where the shortages will be
Previous overbuilding one-time boom towns, such as Las Vegas and Miami, should provide enough inventory of like-new homes to counter any strong pent-up demand that breaks free.

It's the more constrained markets, where it's particularly hard to build -- such as New York, San Francisco and Seattle -- that will field the bulk of the new bubble problems, according to Retsinas. He, however, is less worried about the purchase market than about rentals, the usual entree for the young buyers expected to lead the new housing market charge.

"Nobody is building any rental inventory," said Retsinas.

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thanks for the information

It is going to be very interesting to watch things unfold over time.


Shortage of homes

is ALREADY a problem. Bottom line is there is TOO many people and and the birthrate is also too high.(kids having kids) Needless to say the never ending added population migrating to the USA.

With Corporate America sending JOBS out of the country, the economy flushing down the pipes and more and more people coming into the USA, it would seem obvious to most that have any brains cells left, that we have a problem.

THE PROBLEM:

Government spending at record highs,job rates down,food, gas and cost of living rising every moment, not to mention health care taxes and insurance and God knows what else is around the next corner.

Folks NOT living on a BUDGET- you are your own enemy!!!!!!!!!

People living on credit and above their means. If you can't ZERO the balance each month, you can't afford it.(unless emergency)

Parents trying to be a 'friend' to their children instead of a Parent and doing whats best financially,ethically, morally for the family. Saying 'yes' when they know they should say NO to purchases,but WANT the kids to have things. Say no if you can't afford it....it's OK. If you don't learn to, you'll be added to the bankrupt and foreclosed list.

Currently OVER 60% of Parents are supporting their 'Adult' children. WHAT???? Constantly eating away at the retirement fund until zero.

Live on a BUDGET - starting NOW or is it TOO late for you.

Doctors giving EVERYONE a pill to cure them - 86% of population is on or addicted to pills. USA zombie land-no wonder nobody can think straight or do the job correclty.

The big question is..."What happenened to the 'backbone' of America??? PARENTING??? MONEY and GREED. Keeping up with the 'Smiths and Jones' while putting yourself deeper and deeper in debt= STUPID

Then,WOW...I got an idea-I want to be a Real Estate Investor and become RICH.
Sadly 98% fail- 90% also failed to control their own lives and looked to REI as a 'get rich quick' solution to their problems. Read a book or take a course and a magic pill will solve all my problems is what I see ALL THE TIME- when it doesn't happpen, they blame the world and everyone in it.

GOD help us all.

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Mike
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