2021 Set New Annual Records for Home Prices. 2022 Continues the Trend.

Case-Shiller home price data via St. Louis Fed, chart by Mish

Home Prices Disconnect From Rent and OER

Case-Shiller home price data and CPI data via St. Louis Fed, chart by Mish

Home Price Disconnect Notes

  • National is the Case-Shiller national home price index.
  • 10-City represents the weighted average of the cities in the first chart.
  • CPI is the Consumer Price Index
  • OER stands for Owner’s Equivalent Rent. It is the single largest component in the CPI with a current weight of 24.151% of the total CPI.
  • Rent of Primary Residence is a CPI component with a weight of 7.374% of the CPI.

OER is the mythical price the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) says one would pay to rent one’s own house from oneself, unfurnished, without utilities.

CS National, Top 10 Metro Percent Change From Year Ago

Percent Change From Year Ago Notes (January 2022)

  • CPI: 7.48%
  • OER: 4.09%
  • Rent: 3.76%
  • Case-Shiller 10-City: 17.52%
  • Case-Shiller National: 19.17%

CPI Understated?

Yes, by a lot.

I do not believe OER is only up 4.09%. Nor do I believe rent is only up 3.76%.

Moreover, home prices are not directly in the CPI, only OER and and Rent.

CPI vs Case-Shiller Adjusted CPI

CPI data from the BLS, the adjusted CPI is a Mish calculation

Adjusted CPI Discussion

My Case-Shiller adjusted CPI is calculated by substituting the percentage change in the Case-Shiller national index for OER in the CPI.

The result is an adjusted annual CPI rise of 10.29%. That’s a new record high for this data series.

There is a lot of controversy over this procedure. The BLS and many economists will point out that houses are not a “consumer” expense but a “capital” expense.

That’s technically accurate except historically home prices used to be in the CPI so historical comparisons are a bit distorted.

The problem with being “technically” accurate is that it is a huge mistake by the Fed to ignore asset bubbles. Inflation matters, not just alleged CPI inflation.

This historical distortion never mattered much in practice because the second chart shows OER, the CPI, rent, and home prices all rose in sync.

Real Interest Rates

CPI data from the BLS, the adjusted CPI is a Mish calculation

Real Interest Rates Discussion

One can calculate “real” (inflation-adjusted) interest rates by subtracting the rate the Fed charges from CPI measures.

The Fed charges 0.8%, mortgage rates had been around 2% in January but have since soared so one could formulate another version of “real” based on mortgages.

No matter how you slice it, rates are amazingly low. With home prices up 19% but the Fed Funds Rate at 0.08% in January and mortgages now only 4% or so, it’s no wonder we have another housing bubble and bubbles in equities.

The Fed wanted higher inflation and finally got it in spades.

Why the Inflation Surge?

  1. Three rounds of fiscal stimulus, two by Biden and one by Trump
  2. Supply chain disruptions
  3. Massive change in consumer preferences from services to goods
  4. QE finally mattered
  5. War – Not reflected in these charts as home price data only through January

1: Fiscal Stimulus

There were three rounds of fiscal stimulus, the last two of which were unwarranted in size and scope.

In addition to direct fiscal stimulus, Trump initiated and Biden twice extended evictions. Many people made no attempt to pay rent and instead spent that money

2: Supply Chain Disruptions

Supply chain disruptions erupted due to Covid-19.

3: Massive change in consumer preferences from services to goods

As a result of Covid consumers stopped eating out, going to the gym, going to movies, reduced haircuts etc. Instead they needed home offices, new computers, etc.

QE Finally Matters

Thanks to the Fed’s QE policy, the stock market made an enormous bubbles.

The bubble wealth effect led people chasing homes regardless of price. And a huge wave of boomer retirements from those feeling wealthy increased the labor shortage.

Poor Measure of Inflation

The big problem the Fed failed to see is that the CPI is an extremely poor measure of inflation.

I assure you inflation matters, not just alleged consumer inflation.

The Fed missed a huge jump in inflation because it does not know what to look at.

President Biden Says “I Feel Your Pain”

President Biden Says “I Feel Your Pain”, He Means His Pain in Polls

‘I know food prices are up, and we’re working to bring them down,’ says President Biden.

Biden and Inflation Go Hand in Hand

Lumber futures courtesy of the Nasdaq, annotations by Mish.

Unfortunately, everything Biden stands for is inflationary: Free education, free child care, free paid leave, etc.

The president also has a big push for unions, and that’s guaranteed to raise the price of everything the unions touch.

Finally, president Biden increased tariffs on Canadian lumber helping fuel home price inflation.

CPI Up Most in 40 Years

For more on the CPI, please see Consumer Price Index Jumps to 7.9 Percent, Another New Four-Decades High.

That CPI report is as of February. Home price data lags. 

Alleged “Benefits of Running the Economy Hot”

Finally, recall that Charles Evans, president and chief executive officer of the Chicago Fed wants to run the economy hot.

For discussion, please see Chicago Fed President Praises the “Benefits of Running the Economy Hot”

This post originated on MishTalk.Com.

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42 Comments
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FrankieCarbone
FrankieCarbone
3 years ago
Mish, wife bought a condo in 2007, bt 2011 it dropped to.4x, last summer she sold is for 2X. I totally believe this.
Casual_Observer2020
Casual_Observer2020
3 years ago
What happen to realist?
Steve_R
Steve_R
3 years ago
Look like he was banned from the site, his name is gone from old posts. Mish’s loss
Doug78
Doug78
3 years ago

Realist
forgot that Mish being the originator and therefore the Prime Mover of his blog
possesses god-like powers over his creation and Realist having offended Mish enough
for Mish to send him to blog-commentator Hell which consists of Realist being
able to make comments but those comments are now invisible to the other
commentators so Realist will never get a like nor will anyone comment on his
comment. Indeed his existence has been totally erased for the other
commentators and will be to the end of time.

Oileknuttall
Oileknuttall
3 years ago
Reply to  Doug78

No. If you are banned, you cannot login or make comments.

Doug78
Doug78
3 years ago
Reply to  Oileknuttall
I made a religious analogy of banning and it should be viewed as such.
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
3 years ago
Reply to  Doug78
he’s been sanctioned as an enemy combatant. he’s in mish’s guantanamo bay. being tortured for eternity. god bless amerika. and god bless the troops. love your blog, king mish. have mercy on my soul.
Casual_Observer2020
Casual_Observer2020
3 years ago
This housing is not a bubble because most buyers at the higher end were foreign investors. Many houses are not even occupied but fully paid for. This cycle isn’t riddled with debt like the last one. The Fed also learned that it is better to live with some inflation than have a deflationary crisis like 2008 and 2009.
StukiMoi
StukiMoi
3 years ago
Simple Tulips at a million a pop, can very much be a bubble, even if “the buyers” are foreigners…… Heck, they can even be so, despite some of those foreigners not standing around admiring them all the time…..
QTPie
QTPie
3 years ago
These figures are prior to mortgage rates rising from ~3.2 to 5% on a 30 year fixed. That, all by itself, has caused the monthly payment on a $350K house to go up by about $500 a month. That’s going to put a lot of pressure on the upwards price trajectory of housing.
TechLover1
TechLover1
3 years ago
Reply to  QTPie
It will also put upward pressure on wages. It will also put a dent in discretionary spending as more and more of the paycheck goes to rent/mortgage and food/fuel etc.
There is a large cohort of population that is in prime home buying age group so the dip in home prices (if there is a dip) may not be huge like 2008.
Building costs (both labor and material) are through the roof so new supply will completely stop if prices dip (or even stagnate or not grow like crazy).
There is a realistic chance we end up with stagflation this time.
Robbyrob
Robbyrob
3 years ago
War or Peace, Barbarism or Hope: War threatens world with stagflation https://jomodevplus.substack.com/p/war-or-peace-barbarism-or-hope-war?s=r
Six000mileyear
Six000mileyear
3 years ago
It will be interesting to see if real estate investors took out assumable mortgages. The seller could ask for a higher than market price offset by a much lower interest rate. The monthly payment is the same for the buyer. The investor makes money off a higher sales price, and banks lose the opportunity to roll the assumable mortgage into one with a higher interest rate.
Fish1
Fish1
3 years ago
When talking of bubbles and how they play out, look at 2006-8. In 2006 there was no compelling reason for the RE and stock boom to quit other than things were intuitively out of kilter. Not until the MBS began defaulting was there any documentable reason for concern.
Mish, by the way, was way out in front while the Nobel Economist’s drum and fife corps were all, and I mean all, out to lunch. I dropped my subscription to the Economist at that time.
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
3 years ago
Reply to  Fish1
i read the economist for 40 years for the worldwide coverage and econ and business and science and art analysis. i use their editorial prowess on wars and economy prognasticating as a perfect weather vane. they are mostly wrong. not 100% wrong. but certainly 90%. their advertisers tell the story. the MIC and banking cartel and big governments around globe. imperial newspaper at her best. hate that of course, but it’s their niche. they never saw a war past 80 years that amerika should not sponsor.
BowserB46
BowserB46
3 years ago
Interesting article with 5 things contributing to inflation, while a major item–Biden cutting our domestic oil and gas exploration, production, and transport–is not even included. The cost of fuel is a component of everything we buy, from lumber, bricks, cement and asphalt to build a house, to avocados and tomatoes for a cool salad, to Chinese made televisions and Korean made automobiles. Trucks, diesel-electric locomotives, container ships, and jet cargo planes…all use fuels made from oil–the very oil that the Biden administration shut down in January 2021.
Yet Biden continues to blame Putin and the Ukraine invasion, and the great ignorant masses choose to accept what he says. We have criminals leading a nation of morons.
Billy
Billy
3 years ago
Inflation=Yes
Bubble=No
Recession=No
S&P at all time highs=Within 2 weeks
My question is: Will Newmont fill it’s gap from 2/16/22?
KidHorn
KidHorn
3 years ago
I think 2022 is more likely to set a record for the biggest price drop in any year than a record for the highest prices.
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
3 years ago
awesome analysis. thanks for the hard work. love it.
Tony Bennett
Tony Bennett
3 years ago
Alleged “Benefits of Running the Economy Hot”
The “let them eat lentils” crowd support this garbage.
TexasTim65
TexasTim65
3 years ago
The massive increase in home prices is having an unwanted effect in Florida. My home insurance company (state run) has sent me a notice that they are dropping me because my house price appreciated so much that I no longer qualify for insurance from them (they have a max home price cap as state insurer). This has happened to quite a few people I know including my insurance agent and probably has affected tens of thousands of homes this year alone. We are all scrambling now to find an insurance company to insure us (many have pulled out of Florida entirely in the last 10 years) and I expect my home insurance price to come close to doubling from it’s current 7K/year.
Mr. Purple
Mr. Purple
3 years ago
Reply to  TexasTim65
If state-run, couldn’t DeSantis and/or the legislature raise the maximum?
Zardoz
Zardoz
3 years ago
Reply to  Mr. Purple
They’re tied up working on a final solution to all those gay people.
Mr. Purple
Mr. Purple
3 years ago
Reply to  Zardoz
Ah, priorities.
Bam_Man
Bam_Man
3 years ago
Reply to  TexasTim65
$7K a year for homeowners insurance?
That is more than 4 times what I pay and I live in FL.
Are you on waterfront property? If so, then you are carrying flood insurance which is a different thing (and very expensive).
TexasTim65
TexasTim65
3 years ago
Reply to  Bam_Man
I live on water, but it’s a lake, not the ocean/inter coastal water so I do not require flood insurance (nor do I have it).
I’m in the West Palm area and my home is 4400 sq ft. Where are you and what size home do you have and do you have storm windows (I don’t).
Maximus_Minimus
Maximus_Minimus
3 years ago
Reply to  TexasTim65
You’re lucky to have a state run insurance company, which probably has a mandate. The free market is not so generous.
StukiMoi
StukiMoi
3 years ago
I suppose that, at least in comparison to those who don’t have an overpriced house yet still have to pay taxes to underwrite the mandate, those benefitting from the theft can be called “lucky.”
Long term, life under a totalitarian jackboot is hardly “lucky” though, even for those who happen to be less unlucky than others in some area.
MPO45
MPO45
3 years ago
Reply to  TexasTim65
And when the next hurricane hits (or two or three) and causes $1 trillion in damage because of all the over inflated housing you can bet all insurers will file for bankruptcy and you’ll get nothing. do the math and figure out when that will happen. Most insurance companies are required to report their reserves. I suspect it will be between 2024 and 2026 unless of course something dramatically changes.
You can’t pay me to live in Florida.
TexasTim65
TexasTim65
3 years ago
Reply to  MPO45
There will be a bailout at the Federal level (disaster relief) otherwise banks will go bust in addition to homeowners since a large majority will have mortgages.
MPO45
MPO45
3 years ago
Reply to  TexasTim65
I guess we’re all socialist now expecting the government to bail everyone out no matter what. And then so many complain about the Fed and big government here. How ironic.
Doug78
Doug78
3 years ago
Reply to  MPO45
I like Florida a lot. On the other hand can you tell me where you live so I can say you can’t pay me to live there please?
KidHorn
KidHorn
3 years ago
Reply to  MPO45
Insurance companies have their own insurance against natural disaster. Swiss RE is an example of a reinsurer. There are many others.
TexasTim65
TexasTim65
3 years ago
Reply to  KidHorn
There are. But even those reinsurers have financial limits.
For example if California ever got the big one that totally wrecked everything from LA to San Fran (or some semi-large meteor strike that hit a major city and wiped out a few hundred square miles), no insurance companies or reinsurers could ever hope to have enough money to cover trillions in claims. It would have to be backstopped by the federal government and hence the entire country.
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
3 years ago
Reply to  MPO45
i agree, except i do enjoy staying in FL a few weeks per annum. i could easily live there. but alas, i’ve lived all over god’s green earth and enjoy it all.
BowserB46
BowserB46
3 years ago
Reply to  TexasTim65
More than insurance, these increases are going to be to the detriment of people who neither bought nor sold their houses, if they’re in a state like Texas that finances everything from roads and bridges to school districts with property tax. Just watch as this year every appraisal district will increase taxable values the maximum amount allowed by law–10%. And they’ll follow up next year with another ten percent. And the local taxing authorities will be upping rates too, as school districts get more and more students who do not speak English and whose parents (if known) pay little or no property tax. Median property tax bill last year in Texas was $3,400. Texas has no individual income tax, so you can be retired or unemployed with no income and still have the same Texas/county/city/school district tax bills as your neighbor making $120k a year.
TLinFL
TLinFL
3 years ago
Reply to  TexasTim65
Citizens is a scam. They kick you out after a few years, then invite you back after a mandatory inspection.
TexasTim65
TexasTim65
3 years ago
Reply to  TLinFL
I’m thinking that as well after being with them for 2 years.
MPO45
MPO45
3 years ago
Reply to  TexasTim65
Also forgot to mention, ice melt in antarctic will do wonders for Florida as well. It seems to be melting faster than expected.
KidHorn
KidHorn
3 years ago
Reply to  MPO45
Every time that happens, there are alarming news stories. Think about it. These things have to have always occurred. The ice flows out to sea, breaks apart, and regrows. Otherwise the entire earth would be covered in ice.
Zardoz
Zardoz
3 years ago
Reply to  KidHorn

Flat earth thermodynamics is magical!

KidHorn
KidHorn
3 years ago
Reply to  Zardoz
Has nothing to do with thermodynamics. The ice doesn’t melt. It breaks apart because of a moment arm caused by its extension into the sea. Basic statics. Maybe if you had passed a freshman physics class at some point, you would understand.

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