Will Higher Interest Rates Tank California Home Prices?

Will Higher Interest Rates Tank California Home Prices?
Homes in Malibu, Calif., on Sept. 24, 2021. John Fredricks/The Epoch Times
John Seiler
Updated:
Commentary

Home prices keep going up. But for how long?

For the first time, in March the median home price in Orange County soared above $1 million, according to the research group DQNews/CoreLogic. Los Angeles County was $840,000. Throughout all Southern California, it was $735,000.

But there’s a good chance prices have peaked. Prices largely depend on monthly mortgage payments, and homeowners’ ability to pay them. Higher rates make it harder to make those payments.

According to CNBC, last week the interest rate for a 30-year fixed mortgage rose to 5.2 percent, up from 3.2 percent a year earlier. That’s 2 percentage points higher. As a result, “Total application volume fell 5 percent last week compared with the previous week and was nearly half of what it was one year ago.”
The cause was the Federal Reserve Board last month boosting interest rates from its ZIRP—Zero Interest Rate Policy—to 0.25-0.5 percent. Throughout this article, this is the Fed Funds rate, defined by the St. Louis Federal Reserve Board as “the interest rate at which depository institutions trade federal funds.”
According to U.S. News, “The Fed also said it planned six more increases this year at its remaining meetings, with rates to reach 1.9 percent by year’s end, and another three hikes in 2023.”
But even that might not be enough to tame inflation. On April 18, St. Louis Fed President James Bullard warned inflation is “far too high” and the rate should to up to 3.5 percent by yearend.

Yet that number also is well below inflation, currently running at 8.5 percent a year. When inflation last was that high, 40 years ago, the Fed under Chairman Paul Volcker pushed the rate up to 19.1 percent in June 1981.

The rate also rose to 5.26 percent in July 2007, during a time of just 3.7 percent inflation, less than half what we have now.

In both cases, recessions hit hard. During the 2007-09 recession, real estate prices crashed. In the Inland Empire, they went down as much as 70 percent. In Orange County and other coastal areas, prices dropped by a third. Because of the desirability of coastal living, price fluctuations there are lower.

California Is Not a Nation-State

This process shows how California is not a “nation-state,” as Gov. Gavin Newsom and so many others sometimes describe it to inflate their own worth. California does not have its own currency, nor any control over the value of the U.S. dollar.

The state does have control over housing prices through its overly restrictive regulations, especially the California Environmental Quality Act. But the wide swings in interest rates are far more important.

The root problem is the Fed maintained its ZIRP for far too long. Using the Zero Interest Rate Policy is supposed to be a short-term remedy to “jump start” the economy during a recession. Interest rates went close to zero in Jan. 2009—and stayed there an incredible seven years, until January 2016. No wonder home prices soared. Families financed and refinanced in record numbers. Increased demand inevitably drove up the base price of homes.

The rate gradually was increased to 2.42 percent in April 2019. But when COVID hit a year later, ZIRP was resumed in April 2020.

ZIRP Damage

A major problem with ZIRP is it makes it difficult for people, especially the poor and middle class, to save money. Most people have a savings account at a local bank or S&L. It’s often used even by savvy investors to “park” money between investments. Many people also use it as their only way to save money.

Under ZIRP, these savings accounts pay zero interest. When inflation is 8.5 percent, that means the savings account isn’t “saving,” but losing. It means people can’t save for a new home or car, or to start a business. The insidiousness of inflation destroys the value of what they earned and hoped to invest somewhere productive.

Traditionally, that’s why the Fed rate was 2 percentage points above inflation. Which ought to put it today at 10.5 percent. Obviously, that’s not going to happen—yet. Because doing so right away would cause not just a recession, but a depression, as happened 40 years ago.

I remember that time. I was honorably discharged from the U.S. Army in February 1982 after four years of service and came back to a Michigan with 16 percent unemployment. There were no jobs. I left my home state, never to return except for brief vacations.

Today, how the Fed deals with this crisis is anyone’s guess. But what’s certain is more turmoil for home prices in the “nation state” of California.

Here’s the St. Louis Fed’s historical chart of the Fed Funds rate. The grey shading, coming after interest-rate hikes, indicates a recession:
Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
John Seiler
John Seiler
Author
John Seiler is a veteran California opinion writer. Mr. Seiler has written editorials for The Orange County Register for almost 30 years. He is a U.S. Army veteran and former press secretary for California state Sen. John Moorlach. He blogs at JohnSeiler.Substack.com and his email is [email protected]
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