Seattle Bubble

News & discussion about real estate & the housing bubble in the Seattle area.

Seattle Bubble - News & discussion about real estate & the housing bubble in the Seattle area.

Entries Tagged as 'pent-up demand'

The Mythical Teeming Hordes of “Pent-Up Buyers”

By The Tim on October 7th, 2009 at 10:45 AM · 54 Comments

We’ve been hearing a lot of speculation recently that goes something along these lines:

There is basically this enormous teeming horde of potential home buyers out there lurking on the sidelines for no good reason. All we need to do is come up with the right concoction of incentives to get these pent-up buyers off the fence and the housing market will recover!

Here’s just one example of that kind of reasoning from an article yesterday’s Tacoma News Tribune:

According to Dick Beeson, a Windermere broker and a director of Northwest MLS, the latest numbers reflect “a lot of pent-up demand. A lot more people are realizing closed sales.”

As regular readers of these pages will recall, I do not buy the claim that there is a large mass of “pent-up demand.” In fact, I believe quite the opposite is true: that during the bubble (thanks to virtually non-existant lending standards and a mass get-rich-quick hysteria) and now post-bubble (thanks to various bailouts, tax incentives, and artificially low interest rates) a significant amount of demand has been borrowed from the future.

Let’s take a few moments to visualize the concept of borrowed demand using data on closed sales and population. Here are our working assumptions:

  • The number of closed sales in the year 2000 is a reasonable baseline for a healthy market.
  • In a normal market, closed sales will grow linearly as a function of households.
  • Household size since the 2000 Census has remained steady at 2.39 people per household.
  • For 2009, fourth quarter closed sales will come in 10% above 2008.

Based on these assumptions, here’s a view of the cumulative “borrowed demand” by year since 2000.

Cumulative Borrowed Demand

While sales in 2001 and 2002 were fairly close to what our assumptions would have predicted (slightly lower, probably due to the dot-com bubble fallout), as the housing bubble began to inflate in 2003 the number of borrowed sales started to pile up at an alarming pace, peaking at over 23,000 in 2006.

Since 2005 when closed sales peaked at 31,939 (vs. a forecast “normal” level of 24,118), the number of closed sales has dropped significantly, falling to roughly half the peak level in 2008 at 15,991. To real estate agents, these declining sales numbers indicate that there must be a building volume of “pent-up demand.” However, as the chart above demonstrates, this is merely what it looks like when the market is forced to pay back the demand that was borrowed from the future.

If sales had been allowed to continue correcting at the natural rate we were seeing in the first few months of the year, the entire borrowed demand debt would likely have been paid in full in 2009, allowing sales volumes to begin to recover to a more normal level in 2010. Instead, the market has been innundated with misguided attempts to bring out the non-existant “pent-up demand,” and the way things are shaping up right now it looks like last-ditch borrowing of future demand will leave us with a few thousand sales still to be paid back sometime in the future, likely resulting in a continued drag on demand in 2010 and 2011.

“Pent-up demand” is a myth. That’s not to say that there aren’t some legitimate potential buyers out there with the ability to purchase who are sitting on the sidelines waiting for a better market opportunity. However, they are most certainly far outnumbered by the buyers who purchased prematurely in 2003-2006 that would otherwise have waited a few years to buy once their finances were more in order.

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Which is Larger: Pent-Up Demand or Pent-Up Supply?

By The Tim on April 9th, 2009 at 8:48 AM · 142 Comments

Whenever local real estate professionals are quoted in the paper lately, it seems that one line we’ve been hearing repeated a lot is about the alleged loads of “pent-up demand” out there.

The thinking goes that there are hundreds thousands upon thousands of potential buyers out there that are “waiting on the sidelines” or “sitting on the fence,” and as soon as the housing market starts to pick back up again, they will all rush in at once and the market will be hot hot hot once again, and the opportunity for good deals will have passed.

Let’s explore that theory, shall we? In the chart below I have plotted total yearly closed sales for 2000 through 2008. The bars are centered on the 2000-2002 average (23,106), to give us an approximate visual of how each year compares to the pre-bubble housing market.

King County SFHs: Pent-Up Demand

The “pent-up demand” that the local real estate salespeople love to talk about so much is represented in that big dip in 2008, where sales fell over 30% below our 2000-2002 baseline.

However, the chart also tells a story that you never hear real estate salespeople talk about… From 2003-2006, demand was far above the baseline, with average excesses of 30% for four straight years. This is what I like to refer to as “borrowed demand.”

The total borrowed demand from 2003-2006 was 27,798 sales. The demand shortfall in 2008 was a mere 7,115 sales, enough to “pay back” 26% of the borrowed demand of the bubble years.

Is there some pent-up demand? Probably a little bit, but in reality, the amount of pent-up demand out there will likely still be dwarfed by the amount of borrowed demand that still must be paid back.

Of course, this all completely ignores the other side of the equation: “pent-up supply.” The chart below plots new listings in the same manner as the closed sales chart above.

King County SFHs: Pent-Up Supply

Wow, so during the bubble years, supply was actually slightly lower than the baseline (44,581), averaging 4.3% under the 2000-2002 average from 2003-2005. In 2006-2008, supply has been about 11% under average.

Looked at in the same way as the pent-up demand picture, we’re currently sitting on between 15,000-20,000 homes across the county that represent pent-up supply.

So, to sum up: The borrowed demand from the bubble years has still left us with a demand deficit in excess of 20,000 sales, while the lower than usual new inventory of the last few years has built up a pent-up supply of around 15,000 homes.

Admittedly, this is a rather coarse method of investigating the issue of pent-up demand and pent-up supply, but it’s probably the best we can do with the limited hard data that is available. I’m interested to hear what you think about the issue, especially if you’re an agent that has been using “pent-up demand” as a scare tactic to attempt to “get buyers off the fence.”

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