Wednesday, September 08, 2010

Housing prices must fall but they cannot fall

The consequences of the bipartisan manipulation of the housing market are much more far reaching and disastrous than we have been led to the believe.  Tyler Cowen describes the horns of the dilemma that we find ourselves stuck on:

Many smart people say we should.  It seems increasingly clear that we must.  For how long can the government prop them up?  Are we never to have a private market in mortgages again?
Yet what happens if we let them fall?  Arguably many banks would once again be "under water."  Enthusiasm for another set of bailouts is weak, to say the least.  Our government would end up nationalizing these banks and it still would be on the hook for their debts.  The blow to confidence would be a major one, especially if along the way we saw a recreation of a Lehman or Bear Stearns or A.I.G. episode.
I increasingly believe there is no easy way out of this dilemma and it is a major reason why the U.S. economy remains stuck.  Housing prices must fall, yet...housing prices must not fall.
Here is a very good Dave Leonhardt piece on two different views of housing.  It's where to go, if you are looking for the case for optimism.  I am more pessimistic than David because I see the private sector interest in mortgage securities as remaining quite weak, which suggests the market knows which way prices have to move.

And of course no one.  And I mean no one has any faith that the guys at the wheel either understand what is going on or have the integrity to do the right thing if they did.

Screwing with markets for political ends is such a stupid idea, isn't it?

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