-Ephesians 5:11-13
With the announcement from the Commerce Department that the sale of new homes in August fell by 2.3 percent compared to July, the Los Angeles Times took on a decidedly gloomy tone, concluding, “Sales of newly built homes in the U.S. appear to be stuck at the bottom.” The report noted that the August numbers translated into an annual rate of 295,000 sales, which is close to the low of 278,000 recorded in August last year, and down from the 1.3 million new homes sold in 2005.
Missing was any attention, however, to two important pieces of the economic housing puzzle in that report. First, the trend for new home sales has been flat for the last 16 months, and the 162,000 newly-built homes presently on the market represent a supply of six months and two weeks. A healthy housing market usually has a six months’ supply of new homes. Translation: The housing market in new homes has hit a bottom, and the supply/demand ratio is almost back to normal.
The latest from the Case-Shiller Index shows the same thing, with prices of single-family homes rising 0.9 percent in August following an increase of 1.2 percent in June, and 17 out of 20 cities surveyed showing monthly increases as well. Despite the improvement, David Blitzer, the chairman of S&P’s index committee, remained skeptical:
This is still a seasonal period of stronger demand for houses, so monthly increases are expected. While we have seen four consecutive months of generally increasing prices, we do know that we are still far from a sustained recovery. [Emphasis added.]
Also skeptical of any recovery is David Brooks, writing in an op-ed for the New York Times: “Various economists say it will be at least another three years before we see serious job growth. Others say European banks are teetering—if not now, then early next year.”
Brooks riffs on the current collection of negatives, noting, “There is a lack of consumer demand, the credit crunch, the continuing slide in housing prices, the freeze in business investment, the still hefty consumer debt levels and the skills mismatch—not to mention regulatory burdens, the business class’s utter lack of confidence in the White House, the looming implosion of entitlement costs, the public’s lack of confidence in institutions across the board.”
Walter Russell Mead, professor at Bard College, thinks Brooks may be too optimistic, titling his latest blog “Panic?” and noting that 1) Chinese stocks fell almost 5 percent last week; 2) European banks are facing huge losses over the imminent Greek default; 3) The Fed is worried; and 4) some U.S. banks “are looking shaky again.” He gloomily complained,
That large corporations are sitting on cash hoards or buying back stock rather than making new investments is bad news; that consumers are cutting down debt and doing what they can to increase their savings is…bad news now. And it seems clear that two years of frantic efforts in Washington have failed to breathe new life into the nation’s housing market…
The global economy is now in the catastrophe zone…
The ground under the foundations is washing away; the wind threatens to rip off the roof, and cracks are appearing in load-bearing walls.
All of which portends a bottom, especially when one looks at what is happening in the real world:
With all due respect to the mainstream economists who spend an inordinate amount of time in their classrooms and cubicles, when one looks at the real economy where real people are doing real work, there is reason for optimism. Perhaps excessive gloom is a contrary economic indicator.

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