top of page

Are We in a Housing Bubble? Experts Say No.

Writer: Andreas KramerAndreas Kramer

The question of whether the real estate market is a bubble ready to pop seems to be dominating a lot of conversations – and everyone has an opinion. Yet, when it comes down to it, the opinions that carry the most weight are the ones based on experience and expertise.

Here are four expert opinions from professionals and organizations that have devoted their careers to giving great advice to the housing industry.

The Joint Center for Housing Studies in their The State of the Nation’s Housing 2021 report:

“… conditions today are quite different than in the early 2000s, particularly in terms of credit availability. The current climb in house prices instead reflects strong demand amid tight supply, helped along by record-low interest rates.”

Nathaniel Karp, Chief U.S. Economist at BBVA:

“The housing market is in line with fundamentals as interest rates are attractive and incomes are high due to fiscal stimulus, making debt servicing relatively affordable and allowing buyers to qualify for larger mortgages. Underwriting standards are still strong, so there is little risk of a bubble developing.”

Bill McBride of Calculated Risk:

“It’s not clear at all to me that things are going to slow down significantly in the near future. In 2005, I had a strong sense that the hot market would turn and that, when it turned, things would get very ugly. Today, I don’t have that sense at all, because all of the fundamentals are there. Demand will be high for a while, because Millennials need houses. Prices will keep rising for a while, because inventory is so low.”

Mark Fleming, Chief Economist at First American:

Looking back at the bubble years, house prices exceeded house-buying power in 2006 nationally, but today house-buying power is nearly twice as high as the median sale price nationally… Many find it hard to believe, but housing is actually undervalued in most markets and the gap between house-buying power and sale prices indicates there’s room for further house price growth in the months to come.”


Bottom Line


All four strongly believe that we’re not in a bubble and won’t see crashing home values as we did in 2008. And they’re not aloneGoldman Sachs, JP Morgan, Morgan Stanley, and Merrill Lynch share the same opinion.

Comments


Contact

PLEASE CALL OR EMAIL ME:

united-kingdom-flag-large.png
germany-flag-large.png
spain-flag-large.png

Email: andy@kramer.net

Tel: (310) 402-2940

  • White Facebook Icon
  • White Instagram Icon
  • White LinkedIn Icon
  • White Twitter Icon
  • White YouTube Icon

LOCATIONS:

12001 Ventura Pl, Suite 100

Studio City, CA 91604

Tel: (310) 402-2940

9454 Wilshire Blvd, Suite 400

Beverly Hills, CA 90212

Tel: (310) 402-2940

23914 Summerhill Ln

Valencia, CA 91354

Tel: (661) 877-0323

ALTERNATIVELY YOU CAN FILL IN THE FOLLOWING CONTACT FORM:

Thanks for submitting!

Compass is a real estate broker licensed by the State of California and abides by Equal Housing Opportunity laws. License Number 01991628. All material presented herein is intended for informational purposes only and is compiled from sources deemed reliable but has not been verified. Changes in price, condition, sale or withdrawal may be made without notice. No statement is made as to the accuracy of any description. All measurements and square footage are approximate. If your property is currently listed for sale this is not a solicitation.

© 2020 Andreas Kramer  |  Created by LA Web Design

bottom of page