October 30, 2007

Graph of the vacant home explosion in America


A picture is worth 1000 vacant homes... thanks to HousingBubbleBust for the ugly graph...

They ain't makin' more land.. but damn, they sure made too many houses during this speculative orgy

27 comments:

Frank R said...

How about this for HP's official motto:

"They ain't makin' any more loans!"

Anonymous said...

I assume this includes vacation/2nd homes? If that's the case then I guess the problem is the recent spike in vacancy that is housing stock for sale and vacant w/o an intent to leave it vacant as a 2nd/vacation home.

Anonymous said...

ALL VACANT HOUSES ARE NOW HAUNTED BY THE GHOST OF SPECULATION PAST.

-DCANDOUT

Anonymous said...

Well that make for good kindling over the next few years!!!

Anonymous said...

The second home is the easiest one to sell

Anonymous said...

I didn't know they started tracking all the homes that congressman owned.

Anonymous said...

I would have thought that with a huge housing crash with millions of additional homes vacant, you'd be able to see a significant uptrend in the last year but not a significant uptrend in previous years but that's not what I see. What I see says there's nothing unusual right now about the number of houses vacant because it continues the same trend in place for basically the last 42 years according to the graph. Hmmm ... could the whole housing bubble crash thing be just propaganda from HousingPANIC?? Hmmmmmm?

(Yes - I do agree there's a huge housing bubble bursting so I seriously don't understand why the graph doesn't reflect that?)

Anonymous said...

The talk of the parties next year will be what a great deal one is getting on a rental property. No debt, no taxes, no insurance, and no repairs. Big mcmansions renting for unbeatable prices.

Just one low monthly rent payment that takes the pressure off the ever inflating food, gas and living expenses. Not to mention more vacations!!!

Plus an added benefit of being able to walk away and rent another home if yours is destroyed by one of the natural disasters which continue to pummel our great nation. And as we all can see natural disasters are coming at an increasing rate.

This is the new America where home ownership is not as important as cash in the bank and a lifestyle of vacations and sporting events.

Gotta love the new life style. I do.

Anonymous said...

I'd like to see that population adjusted with 2nd homes broken out.

Anonymous said...

DC Williams said...
I would have thought that with a huge housing crash with millions of additional homes vacant, you'd be able to see a significant uptrend in the last year but not a significant uptrend in previous years but that's not what I see. What I see says there's nothing unusual right now about the number of houses vacant because it continues the same trend in place for basically the last 42 years according to the graph
----------------------------
I think if you look at that same graph in one to two years, you will see a big spike going up, up, up, just like the prices/sales are going down, down, down in the other graphs we have seen. This is only the first of the big reset months (50-55 billion in Oct as compared to 2 billion per month average up till now.) It gets really interesting from here on in. 5-15% default rate on 2 billion/month sub prime has got things rocking, wait until that 110 billion reset hits in Mar 08! It’s going to be 9.999 on the Richter scale!

Anonymous said...

The best side effect of this will be the collapse of funds local govt. will experience as prices crash and with them will the tax rolls. Less money for corrupt politicians, failing schools, BS projects the city dreams up each year, etc....

YIPPIE!

Anonymous said...

What I don't get is that all these experts say that houses need to come down in prices to start selling again. Sure, home builders can do that... no problem. New homes, that is....

But, Joe Homeowner, has a 2nd mortgage or a home equity line of credit that is maxed. And possibly a 3rd position! So he owes more than the house is worth or can sell for. Or maybe he bought at the peak, last year.

So, he can't sell for any less.

Maybe Keith should start up a blog about that.

Anonymous said...

The graph, I believe, muddles the water more than it clears them - among the vacant homes are vacation homes etc. Helpful would be a graph with the number of empty homes for sale or after foreclosure that have to be sold at some time. The number would be less, but the spike no less impressive.

Anonymous said...

I dunno.

I'm a numbers guy and the first thing I do is look at graphs and say "does that make sense?".

Look at 1990. 12.5 MM vacant houses? Let's say the average house has 2.5 occupants. That's 31,250,000 people who either abandoned their houses or the houses were not purchased. The census bureau says in 1990 the US population was 248,700,000 - that's 1 vacant house for every 20 people, or 1 vacant house for every 8 families (2.5 people per house). HMMMM

Look at the current numbers from the graph: 18MM vacan houses = 45,000,000 people displaced, on a population of 301,100,000, or one empty house for every 17 people or every 7 families?

I think the chart neglects to mention something. I'm not sure what.

TLG

Anonymous said...

We need 20 million educated immigrants for our future. All these American-born morons are taking sociology and ethnic studies classes that are worthless wastes of time and money.

Anonymous said...

DC: The graph shows vacant homes only - which will continue to increase for many years ahead.

Its not a chart of CRASHING home prices or home loan late payments.

Anonymous said...

how are the 33 million housing units of illegal alien migrant immagrants cakcukated

Anonymous said...

What I see says there's nothing unusual right now about the number of houses vacant because it continues the same trend in place for basically the last 42 years according to the graph

You might want to buckle your seatbelt then. When the rate increases faster than the rate of population growth (which is around 1% annually), it hints that there might be something wrong.

Anonymous said...

Grilled cheese said ...

"Its not a chart of CRASHING home prices or home loan late payments."

Excuse me but .. duh!Yeah! That's pretty obvious. My point was, this graph doesn't show anything different now than has been for the last 40 years or so. That is, the number of vacant homes is where it would have been predicted to be way BEFORE the housing crash was a twinkle in Keith's eye. I.e, there has been a growing glut of vacancies for 40 years and nothing is special about now in terms of what the graph shows.

Still ... I can't help but think that the sloped line since 1960-ish will get even more steep as a result of this historic housing crash and at some point, the graph will illustrate a great difference.

Anonymous said...

What I don't understand is who owns all of theses homes and how can they carry an empty homes?

Why isn't the inventory of homes for sale greater then it is?

Not that many of the empty homes are 2nd homes.

Anonymous said...

i rent in chicago on a quiet far n/w side street with 2 empty houses (a foreclosure and a failed rehab) and 2 apartments that have been open for 2 months so far.
everything is slow here.

CBontheMV said...

Yes, the trend is steadily upwards. However, look at the data from 2006 on. That's roughly 2MM homes in not quite 2 years. That's what's shocking. Yes, more people have vacation homes, but when housing vacancies, but you need to look at this chart and then take into account foreclosure rates which are also increasing with hockey stick trajectories.

There are roughly 4.5MM homes listed for sale. With two million homes being vacated since the beginning of '06, it supports what I've been seeing in terms of empty homes in the MLS.

Anonymous said...

This chart is useless unless you bother to tell us exactly what a "vacant house" is.

Is a vacation home counted as a vacant house? What's the threshold above which a house becomes vacant? Does it have to be completely unoccupied? For how long? If I spend one week a year in a second home, is it vacant?

Did this study count abandoned homes? Some cities in the rust belt have lots of them (Youngstown OH for example) but they're not necessarily in any condition to be sold or occupied and therefore cannot be counted as inventory.

Do you see my point? It's like me telling you I'm rich because I have a container filled with 1,000,000 coins. They could be pennies, they could be some worthless currency from some debt ridden third world country (well Ron Paul supporters might argue that's the definition of the American penny) or they could be solid gold coins.

Anonymous said...

When I read the disclaimer about what classifies as a vacant home, I think this may be high or deceptive. My parents own 4 "homes", which is actually 1 home and 3 vacation homes (MT, MN, and FL). They don't rent them, and they are all year round units, so those could be included too. They don't plan on selling them any time soon because they are just fine financially.

I guess maybe if taxes increased to horrible levels, they might get to the point of letting one go, but they are kind of retired now and really enjoy going to each place depending on the weather. I don't think there are a lot of boomers in this position, but the ones that did save or were workaholics like my dad and saved their money, they could have a condo down south. Especially I could see a boomer getting one at a bargain price right now at an auction or in the future.

Anonymous said...

" But, Joe Homeowner, has a 2nd mortgage or a home equity line of credit that is maxed. And possibly a 3rd position! So he owes more than the house is worth or can sell for. Or maybe he bought at the peak, last year.

So, he can't sell for any less."

Of course he can and he will if he wants to sell his house. If he thinks he "cannot" sell for less he will not sell his house. It's that simple.

There is nothing sacred here, despite King George II pronouncements about an "ownership society". You pays your money and you takes your chances. Sometimes you make money, sometimes you lose money. Nobody is guaranteeing you anything. Ever.

gregoryw said...

"The release showed that the homeownership rate for the third quarter was 68.2% -- a 0.8% drop from the third quarter of 2006 when the ownership rate was 69%. The bureau calculates the homeownership rate by dividing the number of owner occupied housing units (75.2 million) by the total number of occupied units (110.3 million). The total number of housing units in the U.S. is 128.2 million as of the third quarter of this year – leaving nearly 20 million units vacant or rented."

- From Minyanville. That should clear it up.

So HP's audience is currently up to 20,000,000 people.

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