One of the most important behaviors that smart people and smart organizations participate in is planning for catastrophic scenarios. I know "The Secret" and other name-it-to-claim-it belief systems are prefaced on thinking only about the positive, but in the real world the people who follow such ideologies are saved by those of us who plan for both the good and the bad.
In that light, I wanted to start a thread dedicated to predictions about how the housing bubble will fallout. I believe almost everyone in America recognizes it is a bubble now, so let's start there. We have already seen foreclosure spikes in the most inflated markets and price drops on a national level. So what's next?
I'll start. Keep in mind, I am making no likelihood prediction, only offering scenarios to consider.
Scenario 1) Massive correction - largely contained to housing - that over corrects towards the downside before stabilizing. Prices have inflated by (some say) as much as 100%, so this scenario predicts a collapse of 50%-80% before prices stabilize and again see reasonable gains. Other than builders, lenders, and real estate agents, everyone pretty much keeps their jobs. Such a scenario might take 3-5 years to play out.
Scenario 2) Inflation induces declines which are felt but largely unrecognized. In this case, prices are flat or slump slightly until inflation causes the value of the house to match historical norms. Rent will increase each year until it approaches mortgage prices again somewhere around 2027.
Scenario 3) Priced-out-forever: a massive number of people become homeless, crime rises considerably, and the pseudo-American-Dream of homeownership will never again be recognized by the masses. 65%-70% of people own their home today, but as they die or new residents immigrate, the percent of owners declines forever. This second class of citizen realizes that no legal means exist for them to rise above poverty and homelessness. These vagabonds eventually outnumber the homeowners. Either violence erupts or the massive voter block of POFs (priced out forevers) forces America into being a socialist nation. The time horizon for this is forever.
Scenario 4) The housing slump causes a national or global recession/depression. Millions lose their jobs, and all assets decline in value against the dollar. The decline in asset valuations makes manufactured goods cheaper and the reduction in oil demand pushes out peak oil a few extra years. Asian nations initially suffer when there are no customers for their exports, but the demand is eventually filled by Asian markets which are becoming increasingly self sufficient. Eventually the USA comes out of it's slump to find wages here are more in line with BRIC (Brazil/Russia/India/China). We reestablish the American manufacturing base and sell cheap American goods to China to build our economy back up.
Scenario 5) Housing declines significantly, but not precipitously. Some areas see double digit declines for 2-3 years, but most properties decline less than 40% and more than 15%. Overall demand for housing units decreases as speculation is driven out. This reduces cost of supplies (concrete, wood, paint, etc) to where replacement cost for a typical 3 bedroom 1,700 sq ft house are below $100,000 (excluding land and permits). This creates a vicious downward spiral towards replacement cost, with many people losing their homes and most speculators going into bankruptcy. The government attempts to stop asset deflation, but are unable to while still protecting the overall economy. The next president only has a 4-year term. The fallout causes a general malaise to run through all financial sectors as lending is viewed as more risky. Rates increase, which slows down economic expansion. Leveraged buyouts stop occurring, and anyone investing in Blackstone loses their shirt. The cost of debt hits the stock market brining it down towards 2002 levels again before it enters another long secular bull market around 2017.