Surveyed consumers are more optimistic about their future financial condition in the first quarter of 2012 than in the prior quarter, according to the University of Michigan Index of Consumer Sentiment. While most surveyed anticipated rosier financial conditions on the horizon, sentiment was still significantly lower than in the pre-recession years. Consumers were more optimistic about homebuying conditions in the first quarter compared to the prior quarter. Perceived homebuying conditions remained high by historic standards.

Chart last updated 9/26/12

1st Quarter 2012 4th Quarter 2011 1st Quarter 2011
Financial Condition Index
116
106
107
Homebuyer Condition Index
162
149
157

Data courtesy of the University of Michigan*

Inform them they are able to buy

Changes in homebuyer opinion in the Western Census Region, as shown in the chart above, are tracked based on the answers to two questions:

  • The blue line — “Now looking ahead— do you think that a year from now you and your family will be financially better off, worse off or just about the same as now?”; and
  • The red line — “Generally speaking, do you think now is a good time or a bad time to buy a house?”

The greater the percentage of positive answers, the higher the index figure. Agents and brokers who follow the indexed trend of both lines will improve their awareness of the way homebuyers are likely to behave in the following months when deciding whether to make an offer to buy a home. The Western Census Region includes all states west of Texas. Most of these states experienced economic and home-pricing drops during the Great Recession.

When looking at this data, however, keep in mind that California’s economic recession and financial crisis were fueled by a more extreme drop in employment and real estate pricing than that experienced by the nation as a whole. The real estate recovery will thus take a bit longer to develop in California and the southeastern U.S. (specifically the states from Florida to Louisiana, including Georgia) than in the northeastern or central parts of the country.

Why consumer sentiment matters to real estate
Information on homebuyer confidence is predictive of real estate sales volume for real estate brokers and agents, since it tracks both:

  • where we have been, as confidence is always a reaction to events that have already been experienced; and
  • where we are going, as current and anticipated optimism about the economy is easily translated into willingness to buy products, such as houses, and the level of buyer optimism or pessimism determines the durability and volume of these sales.

To become or remain professionally successful, brokers and agents need to understand the past and accurately anticipate their future sales numbers. Future sales volume, and thus broker fees, is based on the likely reactions prospective homebuyers will have to the market. Successful brokers and agents pay attention to the factors driving tomorrow’s home sales, one of which is consumer confidence.

Innovation from optimism and foresight

Optimism, always present in the real estate industry, can lead to innovation. Such innovative spirit is best capitalized on by professionals who are aware of what is likely to happen in the future. Proper planning is thus an essential aspect of the creative process.

When viewing both lines in the above chart, keep in mind that all responses to the University of Michigan’s poll are based on events that have already occurred: buyer pessimism about the economy is first and foremost a reaction to a recession in the western states that had already passed its worst point at the time of this writing.

As more and improved (or adverse) facts and information become available, reported and absorbed, buyers change their opinions. Public opinion changes with the gathering of facts, from as little as 20% in favor of ownership, to 80% in favor just one year later.

Homebuyer sentiment thus has a lag time of approximately a year before any buyer call to action is actually turned into a sale. Expect homebuyer expectations each year into the economic recovery to be better than they were the year before. The blue line above, the homebuyer likelihood of making important purchases over the next year, tracks an issue that will determine not just home sales, but the strength of the economy at large — primarily jobs. [For current information and analysis about jobs in California, see the first tuesday Market Chart, Jobs move real estate.]

Brokers and agents need to observe the movement in the solid line for the current trend in homebuyer thinking about their ability to buy things, housing in particular. If the line is trending upward, the number of prospective buyers who believe they can actually buy a home in the near future is increasing. Thus, brokers and agents can get in position to capitalize on the information.

The public’s perception about homebuying

Of more specific interest to real estate professionals is the red line. This line shows the general homebuyer perception of the housing market today: whether homebuyers are ready and willing to buy a home based on current real estate conditions. This reflects buyer perception of whether they can make a good deal on a property, based on the price and availability of suitable homes, as well as other factors like current mortgage rates.

Editor’s note — A buyer’s ability to buy is a separate issue from their perception of that ability (their willingness to buy).

At the time of this writing, the public believes it is a good time to buy a home, but they also expect to have financial trouble with their ability to pay the price required to buy that home during the next year. This suggests that most potential buyers are ready and willing to buy homes, and would do so immediately if they only thought they were able. Unfortunately, buyers presently lack (or feel that they lack) the funds for a down payment and the qualifications needed to obtain a mortgage.

Further, buyers are afflicted by a persistent general pessimism about the economy which is normal during any recession and the following recovery period. The most likely result: continued low home sales volume well into 2013.

To compensate for sub-optimal conditions as viewed by buyers, brokers must act to address the heart of the problem: the homebuyer’s perceived inability to pay for a home. Often this inability is based on factors beyond the broker’s control, such as the homebuyer’s employment. On the other hand, many buyers are just intimidated by the rumored scarcity of financing. Practicing brokers and agents are aware, however, that no such scarcity exists. Thus, they must advertise the fact mortgage money is absolutely available so it becomes part of the public information buyers see and absorb, and in turn change their minds.

Get the able buyer pre-approved

Brokers and agents contacting and working with potential buyers need to push these buyers to get pre-approved by two or three lenders. This activity will confirm for the would-be buyer their ability to qualify for a loan to buy a home. This initial step will show them the way, and go far to abate the fear of the non-available mortgage that seems to be paralyzing homebuyers at the moment. [For more on the pre-approval process, see the April 2010 first tuesday article, Homebuyer guidance to avoid a denial of credit.]

For a full recovery, of course, homebuyers must not only accumulate sufficient savings to fund a down payment of up to 20% of the purchase price (but as little as 5% for a Federal Housing Administration (FHA)-insured loan), they must individually believe their access to mortgage funds will remain stable.

When buyers’ personal financial expectations begin to rise, due to an anticipated recovery from the historic loss in statewide home values (which started in early 2006 and still has not bottomed at the time of this writing), we will know a recovery of real estate sales volume is underway.

Anticipating home sales trends

The expected financial state of consumers one year forward, as shown by blue line on the chart above, indicates a greater likelihood that the public will purchase a home in the upcoming twelve months. This number is read as an indication of whether homebuyers expect their finances to be sufficient to buy a home within one year, based on savings and mortgage availability.

The contrasting number, the consumer perception of homebuying conditions, shows whether buyers feel confident a home is an appropriate investment today. When these two factors rise together, as they did in the mid-1990s and the early 2000s, home sales volume will soon begin to rise. This rise, when it next occurs, will indicate it is time for farsighted brokers and agents to prepare to take their share of that future action.

After one year of increasing sales volume, a gradual rise in home prices will follow. However, these improved sales and pricing conditions are not expected until 2013 and 2014, respectively. Consumer pessimism is very slow to break down after a recession, and will linger throughout the several years of a recovery. Additionally, the massive financial crisis was a concurrent detriment which will likely take longer to resolve than the consumer recession, which is not a good omen for a quick real estate recovery.

Observations today about tomorrow’s sales

Other observable factors impacting the strength of future real estate sales volume include:

  • California’s level of employment;
  • accumulation of personal savings;
  • current mortgage rates;
  • availability of private mortgage insurance (PMI);
  • the number of speculators (presently comprised of cash-buyers); and t
  • the expiration of government homebuyer subsidies.

These factors are now functioning in a positive manner and will produce a most favorable trend. Together, these factors give brokers and agents the information they need to descry a rough outline of the future, and help them outwit their professional competition.

When looking at trends in buyer confidence and homebuying in the chart above, consider two factors:

  • the stability of the trend (its consistency and duration); and
  • the relevance of the trend to present market conditions, determined by its confluence with other factors driving real estate sales.

Charts never predict the future; they are history lessons. Thus, in that context, a quick glance at first tuesday’s chart of Home Sales Volume shows how reliable the consumer confidence trends have been in recent years. For instance, the most recent peak in consumers’ anticipated future financial state was in June 2004, when buyers looked forward and saw nothing but financial success. [For current and historic home sales volume, see the first tuesday Market Chart, Home sales volume and price peaks.]

Not coincidentally, the peak in California home sales volume came one year later, in June 2005, when 67,650 homes were sold statewide. In contrast, only 37,295 homes were sold in March 2010, according to Recorders’ data published by Dataquick. On the other hand, perceived homebuying conditions last peaked in December of 2003. This was the end of reasonable real estate pricing in most of California, as shown by the Case-Shiller Home Price Indices. [For historic home pricing in California’s three top cities, see the first tuesday Market Chart, California tiered home pricing.]

What followed was a period of irrationally inflated values, boosted into the stratosphere by:

  • extremely accessible mortgage money;
  • large numbers of speculators;
  • an alarming oversupply of new home construction; and
  • an increase in second home buyers.

All of these unsustainable factors were observable at the time and set the stage for the unstable conditions which would ultimately lead to the crash of 2008.