Calm pays during chaos, as housing good hedge against adversity
You’ve probably woken up this morning a little confused. The
At times like this, it is useful to reflect on the hard facts. The so-called G7 economies – the US, UK, Germany, France, Japan, Italy and Canada – only actually account for about 30% of global economic growth, which is what we are really worried about (see chart). The higher-growth emerging and developing countries account for about 60% (i.e., they are far more important). About 30% to 40% of Australia’s exports go to two of these countries alone: China and India.
So while the IMF projects that the world economy will advance at a healthy 4% to 5% per annum clip this year and next – with Australia’s trading partners expected to expand at an even faster pace – it believes that growth in the US and Europe will be much lower (and likely downgraded further).
The financial markets and media commentators have not yet really understood that the global centre of economic gravity is rapidly shifting away from the North Atlantic countries towards the emerging world and
Already our floating exchange rate is acting like a reflexive “shock absorber” and relieving pressure on the economy during this time of uncertainty. The seven cents sliced off the Aussie dollar (and counting) will make our export- and import-competing industries temporarily more competitive. While this is great news for those sectors, the one drawback is that a depreciating currency means we are likely to import more inflation from China and India (the huge appreciation in the Aussie dollar over the last year had been working in the opposite direction).
As it stands, Australians remain in rude health. The unemployment rate is at its so-called “full-employment” level of just under 5%. Private wages including bonuses grew by 4.1% over the last year. Disposable household incomes rose by even more than this amount. And, if push comes to shove, the RBA can inject enormous stimulus into the economy by cutting home loan rates to as low as 2% to 3%.
In this context, one surprisingly resilient store of wealth during financial market turmoil tends to be Australian housing.
Compared with shares, this was certainly the case during the 1987, 2002-03, and 2007-08 equity corrections, when local share prices plummeted by 44%, 15% and 50%, respectively and cruelled the retirement plans of so many Australians who were “overweight” in this risky asset class.
It was also true in the 2001 “tech wreck”, when global shares, which have historically attracted about 30% of all Australian super fund money, fell by about 40 to 50%.
During the recent GFC, the peak-to-trough fall in Australian home values was just 3% to 4% notwithstanding that an inflation-focused RBA kept mortgage rates at 9.6% as late as August 2008 (see chart). That’s less than what the Aussie sharemarket lost in a single day last week.
A final test case is the 1991 recession, when despite a spike in the unemployment rate to 11%, and double-digit mortgage rates, overall Australian house prices moved sideways.
As regular readers will know, our central case remains that the RBA will hike interest rates once or twice more. This should continue to put mild pressure on the housing market, which has suffered from a combination of the RBA’s de facto double rate hike in November last year and the very “hawkish” expectations of consumers, who have been working on the basis that they would be hit with another two to three hikes. If this comes to pass, a modest downward adjustment in dwelling prices should present prospective buyers with attractive investment opportunities before a very robust recovery as the RBA normalises rates over 2012-13.
I should note here that this view is quickly slipping into the minority despite the extraordinarily high “core” inflation readings in the first and second quarters of 2011 (these core estimates strip out unusual events like the floods that affect the “headline” numbers).
After 20 years of uninterrupted growth, many Australians have forgotten what the cost of high and volatile inflation is. Well, I can tell you: high nominal interest rates.
The average home loan rate in
The cost of price stability (or low inflation) is occasional periods of higher interest rates when the RBA strives to bring those price pressures back into its target 2% to 3% per annum band.
Of course, it also pays to remember that inflation is a tax on hard-earned savings. That is, it punishes savers and rewards spendthrifts (i.e., those with debt). Hence the many net savers out there in the community who have loaded up on cash and fixed-income and want to see the RBA do its job properly, even if it means lower growth and higher unemployment in the short-term.
A second major thesis we have been running for a few years now is that housing could be a solid hedge against extreme adversity. The financial markets are currently pricing an incredible six rate cuts within the next year on the basis of the belief that we are going to get a GFC Mark II (see chart).
On the assumption of its “peachy” base case, the RBA has deliberately sought to crush consumption, retail spending, and the household sectors to make room for the huge amount of private investment that is starting to take place in Australia.
Ordinarily, consumption accounts for 55 to 60% of all economic growth. Yet there is another $140 billion or so of new private investment that will be commenced in the next two years alone, which amounts to about 11 percentage points of GDP growth. Even if you take an axe to that number and halve it, it remains chunky.
Yet if the China and India urbanisation stories blow up, and demand for Australian resources disappears, what will the RBA do?
It will slash interest rates (as the financial markets believe it will), and invite the consumer and household sectors to step into the breach left by evaporating resources investments.
And what is the most interest rate-sensitive sector of the economy? Housing.
Think about what happened during the GFC. The RBA slashed home loan rates from 9.6% in August 2008 to just 5.75% by April 2009. And, unsurprisingly, Australian house prices soared by a stunning 12.1% in 2009.
Since I believe the world will muddle through this current speed bump, which is a reflection of the profound structural adjustment taking place in the global economy, I remain of the view that interest rates are more likely to head up than down (although it is possible that a crisis will compel the RBA to spin 180 degrees).
This will be especially true if the Australian dollar keeps falling, as this will be equivalent to rate cuts and only exacerbate the RBA’s inflation challenge. In this environment, I would keep my investments in cash and floating-rate fixed-income.
To protect against a downside scenario whereby the RBA is forced to abandon its base case and radically reduce interest rates – let’s say to zero – the good news is that virtually all Australians have, quite uniquely compared with peers overseas, fully adjustable rate home loans.
If the RBA reduced the cash rate to zero, we would be paying 2.5% mortgage rates. And, in this contingency, housing will likely once again be a very solid store of wealth.
Christopher Joye is a leading financial economist and works with Rismark International. Rismark and RP Data provide house price analytics products, and solutions that enable investors to go long and/or short the housing market. The above article is not investment advice.