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29th March 2024
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HomeInvestmentHow to avoid buying into a bubble

How to avoid buying into a bubble

THE COLLAPSE of the US housing market bubble emphasizes how important it is to figure out what property is really worth, from a fundamental perspective. Make sure you’re not over-paying!

Here are some yardsticks to avoid buying in bubble markets:

  1. Price to Rent Ratio (or Yield)
  2. Relative Prices
  3. Affordability
  4. Price to Replacement Cost

What ought a house to be worth?

To be supremely unemotional, a house can be considered, from a certain perspective, to be a money-making asset (especially if you don’t live in it but own it to rent).

Now the most comprehensive set ideas of how to value such assets has been developed in connection with the stock market. The value of a share is its Net Present Value, i.e., the value of all expected future earnings from the share, discounted for risk, for financing costs, and for time-preference.

Since no-one knows what the risks, etc, are, stock analysts fall back on rules of thumb:

Valuation tool 1: The price to rent ratio

In the stock market a very popular rule of thumb involves the price-earnings ratio, which measures how high the company’s net earnings are, in relation to the price of the stock. For an ordinary company, a price earnings ratio of between 9 and 18 would be considered within the normal range. Anything above that is considered high. Alternatively yields from the company’s shares of between 5.5% and 10% are considered normal (the price rent ratio is the reciprocal of yields).

Because the stream of future income can be expected to be higher for a company which is rapidly growing, it might be considered normal for a ‘growth stock’ to be priced at up to 20 or 30 times earnings.

It’s the same in the housing market. What’s generally viewed as reasonable is similar to what’s considered reasonable in the stock market, although houses tend to be expected to yield slightly less, perhaps because a house’s value depreciates less over time than the assets of a typical company. The price/rent ratio (or gross rental yield) is the housing parallel to the price/earnings ratio.

Here is a set of rules of thumb for the housing market:

Valuation yardsticks for the housing market
Valuation yardsticks for the housing market (Source: Global Property Guide)

When strong future growth in value is expected, e.g., land on an undiscovered but beautiful beach, or dwellings in an area whose communications infrastructure is being upgraded, or land in a high-growth area, then relatively weak present earnings can be acceptable.

The common sense man raises an objection!

The ordinary house buyer may well feel these reflections don’t answer his main concern.

He wants to live in a house. Why should he value housing for its rental earnings?

As he looks around, the average person sees that while housing is expensive, it also seems generally to increase in value. He needs a house, and if he waits he’ll probably have to pay more for it. And if he buys in a city where housing tends generally increases in value, he’s not going to lose money if he buys now, never mind what signals are sent by all those ratios.

Perhaps 90% of all house-owners have no intention of renting their house out. So what’s the relevance of the price/rent ratio?

There’s a lot of practical sense to this objection. Buyers do tend to treat houses-for-owning-and-living-in as sui generis, and not precisely equivalent (e.g) to rented houses. But there are several good reasons why people should pay attention to the ‘valuation parameters’.

Low price/rent ratios push the housing market higher

If rental yield levels are high, this will tend to mean that the interest cost of buying a house is low, compared to the cost of renting a house:

Potential buyers will pay less to borrow from the bank (in order to buy) than they pay when renting a house too. Many will move from being renters to buyers.

Entrepreneurs will find it makes sense to buy houses to make money, i.e., buy in order to rent them out.

Both these factors put upward pressure on house prices.

High price/rent ratios put downward pressure house prices

If rental yield levels are low, this will tend to mean that the interest cost of buying a house is high, compared to the cost of renting a house:

  • Potential buyers will find that to buy a house involves paying much more to the bank, than it costs to rent a house. Buyers, especially first-time buyers, may have difficulty financing housing. Banks will be worried about over-lending at loan-to-income ratios which mean that a slight increase in interest rates will mean financial crisis for the borrower.
  • Entrepreneurs will find that buying-to-let won’t pay.

High price/rent ratios tend to put downward pressure on house prices.

House prices tend to revolve around a price/rent ratio range. The house price cycle can be viewed as a kind of circle, with houses prices moving from yields of (say) 4% to 11%

  • Yields shifting down to 4% would represent danger.
  • Yields rising to 11% would signal opportunity.

In broad international perspective the ‘range’ is likely to be fairly similar in different countries (because real interest rates are broadly similar) but not entirely similar.

Cyprus property rental yields
Property rental yields in Cyprus (Source: Global Property Guide)

Countries with higher nominal interest rates, and countries with weak mortgage markets, will have relatively low price/rent ratios. As their housing markets develop institutionally, house prices will also adjust upwards – as is now occurring now in Eastern Europe.

Every market will have a range. To imagine that a market can escape totally from its range of price/rent ratios is bubble thinking.

Valuation tool 2: Relative prices

People tend to actively look for cheaper and better alternatives. Where houses are very highly priced, people will seek more affordable alternatives.

So if you’re buying property that’s amazingly expensive on a square metre or square foot basis – beware.

To some extent, that logic applies internationally, as well. Consider – is the average Muscovite’s income-earning potential really enormously higher than that of the Parisian, Roman, Dubliner, or Viennese? Clearly not. So Moscow’s apartment prices, at €10,000 per sq. m., seem overvalued.

Similarly Brussels (Belgium) is apparently undervalued – located in a high-income country; its housing is valued at prices similar to Eastern Europe.

These anomalies can last a long time. But eventually, relatively high house prices tend to come down to earth.

An economic crisis, a currency crisis, and bang – house prices fall, and are no longer out of line with reality.

Valuation tool 3: Affordability

If house prices are so high that very few people can actually afford to buy them, then their value will likely fall in future. Simple, right?

Right. But how to measure when prices are ‘high’?

Well, a reasonable measure of value is a country’s GDP/capita, as a multiple of house prices per sq. m.. In a country where the ratio of house prices to GDP/capita is high, it’s a fair bet that houses are overvalued.

Relative to GDP/Capita levels:

  • House prices in Luxembourg, Belgium, Norway, Denmark and Austria seem cheap.
  • House prices in the UK, Italy, France and the Netherlands seem comparatively expensive. However, note that our GDP-Cap/Sq. m. yardstick is best used to compare countries at the same GDP levels. Why? Because:
  • Housing in poor countries tend to be relatively expensive relative to the local standard of living (they’re poor, right?).
  • Global Property Guide house prices are for high-end, city-centre prices – not average house-prices (particularly in poorer countries).

Valuation tool 4: Price-to-replacement cost

If house prices are much higher than the cost of building (construction costs), developers are motivated to put up buildings.

As new supply comes into the housing market, that tends to put pressure on prices. So when house prices are far greater than new-build costs, it’s a danger sign – prices are likely to come down.

There is one exception. Where regulations restrict the construction of new buildings, new-build prices are less likely to act as a ceiling on the market.

Europe is replete with building codes, permits, quantitative restrictions, etc. These limit the amount of new housing supply. Such regulations mean that house prices tend to be above new-build costs. That’s not an anomaly. It’s part of the system.

Elsewhere, keep an eye on new build costs. Where (in the absence of strong regulation) house prices move above new-build costs, it’s a warning sign.

Now use our valuation tools!

Horrendous screams! Despair! Anguish! – We’ve just fallen off the top of the strongest housing market boom for a century.

Well, we warned you before the crisis, didn’t we?

Well, we’re still warning you. Use our yardsticks! Use our four indicators of value:

  1. Price to Rent Ratio (or Yield)
  2. Relative Prices
  3. Affordability
  4. Price to Replacement Cost

Use them to make judgments about housing prices. Above all, remain sceptical. Be hard-headed about valuations.

There will be some great deals emerging in the coming years. Use these yardsticks to identify them.

Copyright © 2009 Global Property Guide

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