Home Buying Trends Showing Signs Of Extreme Bubble Setup: Is It About To Burst?

 | Jul 09, 2021 11:07AM ET

As we continue to explore the recent data and setup related to the current housing market bubble, this second part of our research will continue to highlight the similarities we are seeing in the current market climate to the 2005~2008 housing/credit market event that crashed the markets over 15 years ago. Additionally, we'll also highlight some of the efforts the Federal Reserve and global central banks have taken to support the recovering global economy over the past 15+ years. Are they pushing the markets to extremes and will they be prepared for a reversion event if one takes place?

In the first part of this research article, we highlighted the supply/demand equilibrium function and the four laws of the supply/demand equation. It is important to understand that all price exploration/valuation functions operate within the boundaries of these supply/demand functions. Buyers and sellers are always operating within these boundaries – even if they don't know it.

The process of moving beyond the supply/demand equilibrium is usually driven by extreme market events – such as extreme demand for a product (a “fad”) or a very low supply component (where manufacturers can't keep up with demand from buyers). This represents an extreme buying frenzy – where buyers chase prices higher attempting to get in before the peak (FOMO). In the opposite case, where supply is excessive or where buyers suddenly decide they are not interested in a product, this is when the supply/demand equilibrium level tends to fall below normal price equilibrium levels. This represents an extreme depressed market value – where deep price discounts are usually common.

My team's research suggests the U.S. housing market is shifting from an extreme demand event (FOMO) into a more moderate price reversion event that may align with a broad global market correction/reversion event.

Recently, we published a couple of articles that have begun to play out accurately.

  • July 6, 2021: THE PEAK OF THE S&P 500 STOCK MARKET RALLY – ARE WE NEARING THE TOP?
  • June 23, 2021: ARE THE US MAJOR INDEXES ROLLING OVER IN AN EXCESS PHASE PEAK SETUP?
  • June 16, 2021: THE TREND IS YOUR FRIEND UNTIL IT ISN’T – DOW JONES AND TRANSPORTATION INDEX BREACHING CRITICAL PRICE SUPPORT AHEAD OF FOMC MEETING

My team and I believe the recent FOMC statements in support of continued asset buying and continued mortgage-backed security buying efforts may have actually set off a “confidence crisis” among investors and traders. This could be considered similar to the mid-2018 deep market decline set off by the Federal Reserve pushing interest rate above 2.5% in a moderate rate increase process.

Get The News You Want
Read market moving news with a personalized feed of stocks you care about.
Get The App

These types of “confidence crisis” events can be initiated by any number of factors in reality. A few examples could be: consumers/traders suddenly realizing price levels are well past extremes; a sudden shift in consumer spending habits; a belief that the future economy will be shaken up by unknown factors; or simply a supply/demand equilibrium extreme suddenly becoming very evident. The one thing that seems to happen in any case like this is that traders, investors, and consumers sometimes act like a flock of birds when these types of events unfold. At first, just a few notice the change in direction, then almost the entire flock of birds see the change and as one (except for a few stragglers) change course to follow the leaders.

We may be at this point now. If true and this begins to unfold over the next few weeks and months, then we may start to see a wave of reversion events taking place across many various asset classes (stocks, currencies, cryptos, homes and others).

Now that we've set the process/function event up for you to understand, let's continue exploring the U.S. housing market data to attempt to confirm our expectations.

Pending Home Sales Fall Dramatically From Post-COVID Highs

U.S. Pending Home Sales have recently moved decidedly lower, after reaching highs above 130 on the chart below. The recent uptick from 106 to 114 may represent a temporary rebound after the nearly 30% decline in sales activity. Some people attribute this decline in sales activity to the lack of inventory available in certain areas. Whereas I attribute this decline to more of a consumer sentiment reaction. The process of a supply/demand peak price level event often coincides with a buyer's understanding that a peak price event is taking place. They may then decide to hold off on making any immediate purchases because they believe price levels are excessively high.

History has shown this type of event to be very common; fads come and go. One minute the pet rock was hot and then it was not. Beanie Babies were hot for years – now they sell for pennies. Tulips were, many centuries ago for a brief few months, more expensive than homes and horses, then the tulip market collapsed.

All of these are examples of buying extremes in a supply/demand function that determines operational boundaries of function – almost like physics creates constructs that all of space/time adheres to.

The downward price trend of pending home sales suggests the post-COVID extreme buying phase ended in early 2021 and has continued to decline substantially. My research team believes a deeper decline is necessary to cleanse out the continued excess in the markets – which would potentially represent a 75~85 print in pending home sales for a period of at least 3~5 months.

Although lows on this chart are fairly short-term on average, we believe the excess buying phase prompted by the post-COVID-19 relocation event will eventually prompt a strong downside reversion event that will prompt many months of “price exploration” in an attempt to settle a market bottom.