3 Reasons Why Worries About 2008 Repeating Are Unfounded

 | Jun 13, 2022 08:36AM ET

Lately, with large companies announcing retrenchments and interest rates starting to rise, some concerns that the current surge in housing prices could potentially end up like 2008 are making their rounds.

While these concerns are understandable, there are distinct differences between this downturn and the 2008 recession. Three main differences between then and now explain why these worries are unfounded.

h2 1. Stock Valuation Aren't That Far-Fetched/h2

When it comes to the stock market, the similarities between 2008 and today are obvious. Both eras saw a rapid appreciation in equity prices, leading valuations to rise to near-historic levels. Some experts even think we are experiencing an “everything bubble,” where asset prices are way over-valued.

One of the most prized measures of the stock market’s relative value is Yale economist and Nobel laureate Robert Shiller’s cyclically adjusted price-to-earnings (CAPE) ratio. Currently, the ratio stands at 36.67, while before 2008, it was measured between 25 and 27. The CAPE ratio has only ever been higher than today during the dot-com era in late 1999 and 2000.

However, CAPE is just one old method of stock valuation. There are many other ways to measure valuation and many financial market experts of today say the stock market is valued differently than it used to be. Many tech analysts vouch that the current growth trajectory is dramatically different today than in 2007 before the financial crisis.

Tech valuations relative to growth, for example, are cheaper by about 25% than in 2007. This means that the naysayers only use metrics that support their overvaluation argument and do not look at the full picture. Stock valuation is not that stretched by today’s standard.

h2 2. Housing Market Situation Is A Lot Better/h2

The 2007-2009 financial crisis began with cheap credit and lax lending standards that fuelled a housing bubble. It began during a period of ultra-low interest rates and took several years to unfold. The only similar parts then and now lie with the low-interest rate only. The other parts of the equation are markedly different.

The subprime mortgage crisis preceded the stock market crash of 2008—a black swan event considered so rare as to be effectively impossible to predict. While the bulk of the damage was from the Bear Sterns-Lehman fallout, the crisis was initiated by the subprime mortgage crisis that affected Wall Street banks as subprime loans with poor borrower credit history were repackaged as low-risk financial instruments such as mortgage-backed securities (MBS) and collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) and sold to them.

Soon a big secondary market for originating and distributing subprime loans developed, and the availability of high leverage made trading in such toxic assets spiral out of control. Everyone bet that the housing market would go up forever.

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When the bubble burst, financial institutions were left holding trillions of dollars worth of near-worthless investments in subprime mortgages. At the same time, millions of American homeowners found themselves owing more on their mortgages than their homes were worth, making it a double whammy for the banks since even repossessing that real estate could not help the banks recover the bad debts.

The losses on real estate lenders and brokers spread throughout the financial industry and eventually brought about several bank bankruptcies, including the biggest failure in US history, Lehman Brothers. However, the current housing market in the USA is very different from that in 2007. 

According to US Census Bureau data, while US homebuilders produced 27.1 million homes between 2000 to 2010, that figure fell sharply to only 5.8 million between 2011 and 2021. This lack of production has led to a severe supply crunch in today’s housing market.

This means that the current surge in home prices may be more sustainable than it was back then, and a collapse is less likely, even if interest rates were to rise another few upticks. In 2008, the housing market was in oversupply.

Another reason why housing prices may not crash this time around is the Americans’ household indebtedness. This level is still some distance away from the unsustainable level reached in 2007, where according to Federal Reserve data, the debt of American households in 2007 was around 100% of GDP. That figure stands at only around 77% of GDP in 2021.