Escaping To The Country May Be Leading To An Extreme Real Estate Bubble Setup

 | Jul 08, 2021 05:04PM ET

The past few years have seen housing prices skyrocket as flippers, speculators and traditional buyers jump into home buying or selling to relocate to different areas throughout the U.S. One interesting facet of this phenomenon recently hit NBC news over the past few days related to the super-hot Boise, Idaho, and Coeur D'Alene, Idaho, markets. Home prices in the Boise area have skyrocketed higher by more than 30% in just 12 months. In Coeur D'Alene, home prices have risen more than 85% in the past 12 months.

Is Supply-Demand Measure Distorted By Recent Activity?

My concern is that the post-COVID buying/relocating trends have pushed the supply/demand pricing factors well past the equilibrium. Simply put, the moratoriums and policies related to home renters and homeowners throughout the COVID-19 crisis have created a supply crisis at a time when many people had the capabilities to sell and relocate into different areas of the U.S. at the same time. Diminishing supply with hyper-active demand pushes price levels upward and to the left, as illustrated on the supply/demand chart below.

The data and activity are supporting a hypothesis that speculators, flippers and homebuyers have chased the rising price levels well past a key equilibrium level, suggesting that a reversion process is very likely in the near future. This reversion event may be similar to the 2008-09 housing crisis as banks suddenly realize they've issued loans to borrowers at extremely high price levels with very little collateral to support these transactions. Or borrowers suddenly realize they are trapped in an overpriced home while the economy reverts to lower output levels. Either way, this seems like a receipt for some type of crisis in the making.