More On Interest Rates And Home Prices

 | Jun 22, 2021 01:02AM ET

Some follow-up thoughts on yesterday's post.

There might be some more to think about regarding interest rate sensitivity and local supply constraints. I asserted yesterday that the decline in yields from 2000 to 2005 was concentrated among the more expensive cities, but that yields remained relatively stable in other cities during that time.

One implication is that expensive cities may be more rate sensitive. I am unusually flummoxed by the patterns here for some reason. But, digging around some more, I think I have become less sure of my intuition about sensitivity to interest rates and about relative housing yields across metros.

This first chart suggests the reason for expecting more yield volatility in expensive cities and possibly more sensitivity to interest rates. Clearly, over time, high rents have become an increasingly important factor in housing markets.

Systematically, where rents are higher, gross yields are lower. And, where rents are low, yields seem to remain relatively stable over time. The relationship between rent levels and yields moves up and down through hot and cold markets.

In other words, a bit counterintuitively, where rents rise, the rent/price ratio declines and becomes more volatile.