Is real estate another bubble ready to burst? Experts are cautiously watching the red-hot US housing market, but remain divided on the likelihood of a crash that could be a devastating economic blow.
On a national level, home prices last year rose 8.3 percent, the fastest pace in a decade, to a median level of US$184,100, government figures show.
But in some big metropolitan areas including Washington and San Francisco, prices are up about 20 percent and million-dollar homes are becoming increasingly common.
Part of the rise is due to an increase in housing speculators. The National Association of Realtors found 23 percent of homes sold last year were bought by investors, and there are widespread reports of buyers "flipping" homes for quick short-term gains in many markets.
David Berson, the chief economist for mortgage finance group Fannie Mae, notes that the level of investor ownership of housing hasn't been this high since the late 1980s, which led to a crash in housing prices.
"Many analysts think that a high investor share in the Northeast and California helped exacerbate the housing downturn that happened during the 1990-1991 recession," he wrote in a recent commentary, adding that "the risk of regional home price declines is higher" as so many purchases are by speculators rather than residents.
Economist John Makin of the American Enterprise Institute argues that there is "objective evidence of a housing bubble in the United States."
He notes that home prices have risen 40 percent since 2000, while "the ratio of average yearly rents to house prices has bee dropping steadily."
This, says Makin, is "reminiscent of the way earnings plunged relative to soaring equity prices before the tech bubble burst in 2000."
Economists say super-low interest rates have fueled the rise in home prices, making it easy to borrow money for real estate investments. But like many other hot investments, real estate could go cold quickly and send shockwaves through the economy.
"The big mistake, in my view, came when the Fed condoned the equity bubble in the late 1990s," said Morgan Stanley chief economist Stephen Roach.
"It has been playing post-bubble defense ever since, fostering an unusually low real interest rate climate that has led to one bubble after another."
Analysts say rising interest rates are likely to cool the housing fever, but the big question is whether this becomes a soft landing or a calamitous plunge.
"I don't like to make the statement housing bubble for the simple reason there isn't a [uniform] housing market," says Joel Naroff of Naroff Economic Advisors.
"Any city and town has dozens of sub-markets and within those submarkets there are places where there are bubbles. What that means is that you have a slowdown and you might even have a small general price decline, but that will be made up of some areas declining sharply and some areas rising slowly."
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