Just back from the Fisher Center for Real Estate and Urban Economic’s semi-annual symposium on all things real estate. (FCREUE is the real estate department within UC Berkeley’s Haas Business School.)
Ken Rosen is the Center’s oft-quoted co-chair and quietly advises real estate investment funds with over $300 million in assets. Most of the time these symposiums take a very high-level view of real estate: it’s an asset class to be compared to other assets, and the focus is usually on institutional investors and broad real estate segments.
But with the housing melt-down, recent symposiums have been very much about the lowly residential market, both national and local, albeit within the wider context of the economy as a whole.
Rosen almost always delivers a fact and slide-packed economic forecast. It’s a big part of why I go. Here are some of his current observations and predictions:
- The Shape of the Recovery:
- Chances of a fragile recovery: 55%. We’ve already had a big bounce; he expects a slowdown for the rest of the year (This is a broken “W”)
- Chances of a moderate recovery: 35% (This is the “U”)
- Chances of a mild recession: 10%, (Think an “L” with a sinking bottom.)
- Jobs: He thinks the job situation will turn around by the end of 2010 (other speakers weren’t so sure.) San Francisco has already started adding jobs.
- Interest Rates: Rosen thinks that the Fed is already missing the boat on inflation and that it’s inevitable. Just as important, he thinks that the Fed should already be raising short-term interests, though he thinks it’ll keep them at near zero for another six months or so.
“Two years from now, short term interest rates will be back up to 4%.”
As for 30 year fixed mortgages, if rates go up to 6%, the real estate market will probably still be ok. If they go to 7%, we’re in trouble.
- Home Prices. US Single family home sales will look good for the next few months but then will slow towards the end of the year. Lots of people are coming back on to the market because they see movement and because of the tax credits.
And now the takeaway:
“If you feel secure [in your job], now is a good time to buy because interest rates are going to go higher and prices probably won’t go much lower.”
Oh, and one last thing: Short China real estate. They’re in a massive bubble of their own.
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Who is secure in their job??????