IrvineRenter_IHB
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<a href="http://www.irvinehousingblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/10/california-valuations.pdf">Goldman Sachs report on California House price valuations</a>
This is a PDF File.
From the report:
<strong>"OUR CALIFORNIAN HOUSE PRICE MODEL
1. From 1985 to 2003, 82% of quarterly variation in the
OFHEO index of Californian home prices could be explained
by only two economic factors: state-level disposable
income and interest rates.
2. This relationship broke down in 2004; sales of
“affordability products” (e.g., subprime, option ARMs,
home equity loans), which spiked in 2004, drove Californian
home prices well-above levels supported by economic
conditions, in our view.
3. Now that the secondary market for these affordability
products has all but disappeared, we expect home prices to
return to normalized levels (i.e. price levels implied by
current and forecast disposable income in California as well
as U.S. ten-year treasury yields); this implies a 35-40% fall."</strong>
Nice to see they finally figured it out.
This is a PDF File.
From the report:
<strong>"OUR CALIFORNIAN HOUSE PRICE MODEL
1. From 1985 to 2003, 82% of quarterly variation in the
OFHEO index of Californian home prices could be explained
by only two economic factors: state-level disposable
income and interest rates.
2. This relationship broke down in 2004; sales of
“affordability products” (e.g., subprime, option ARMs,
home equity loans), which spiked in 2004, drove Californian
home prices well-above levels supported by economic
conditions, in our view.
3. Now that the secondary market for these affordability
products has all but disappeared, we expect home prices to
return to normalized levels (i.e. price levels implied by
current and forecast disposable income in California as well
as U.S. ten-year treasury yields); this implies a 35-40% fall."</strong>
Nice to see they finally figured it out.