From Danielle DiMartino:
[quote]Some irony is so strong, it knocks you off your feet. That's what happened Tuesday as I listened to the Mortgage Bankers Association First-Quarter National Delinquency Survey conference call.
Delinquency and foreclosure rates have been falling and remain tame. That's good news. The reason, said MBA chief economist Doug Duncan, is strong job creation. There's a bit more to it than that, of course, something he elaborated on later in the call.
But the irony hit me right then, as I recalled reading the same idea in a piece from Northern Trust Company: "The future of the housing market is tied to employment conditions in the economy," wrote economist Asha Bangalore. "The performance of the housing market has played a visible role in payroll growth."
So the crux of Ms. Bangalore's findings was that the housing market was a success thanks to the housing market. Huh?
To be precise, Ms. Bangalore noted that since the recovery started in November 2001, employment in housing and related industries has accounted for 43 percent of payroll growth. So she worries that since the Federal Reserve started raising interest rates last June, housing's contribution to job growth has shrunk to 13 percent.
The decline is understandable. The mortgage lending industry, for one, has hit its limit as far as job creation. The field is crowded and competitive. That means only the most inventive brokers, lenders and appraisers are surviving. Notice the recent introduction of 15-year interest-only loans. Creativity like that should continue to propel our housing bubble.
Creative loans --Creative loans let buyers purchase homes they couldn't otherwise afford, and that has helped fuel runaway prices. And that brings us back to the real reason why delinquencies and foreclosures are tame. When those buyers run into trouble with their unaffordable homes, they've so far been able to unload them at a profit.
In the Pacific region, where the bubble is biggest, the seriously delinquent rate is 0.58 percent. In the East-North-Central region, where price gains have been anemic, the delinquent rate is 3.2 percent. "There's no question there is a link between price appreciation being higher and delinquencies and foreclosures being lower," Mr. Duncan said.
The debate reminds us that falling prices not only will coincide with higher foreclosures, they also will be accompanied by millions of pink slips.



