|
5 Reasons Renting Still Beats Buying
This weekend I’ll
throw $1,100 down the drain. That is to say, I’ll pay my rent. Pop-finance
pundits have long used the drain cliché to describe how renters like me waste
money, while homeowners with
mortgages
“pay themselves” and “build equity.”
In April 2007 I argued something different:
Renting Makes More
Financial Sense Than Homeownership. Basically, houses produce
poor returns over long time periods while stocks and other investments produce
good ones, and the outlook for houses is especially poor now, so I’d rather rent
cheaply and funnel my extra cash into something other than a house.
Even though house prices have plunged and I have enough money to buy one, I’m
still not nearly tempted. In what follows I’ll give five reasons. (The first two
form the core of my original argument.) Before all this starts to sound too
self-congratulatory, I’ll also explain the one big thing my essay got wrong.
Reason 1: Houses produce lousy returns, while stocks produce good ones
Houses looked like smart investments in 2007. They had returned 9.3% a year for
a decade, while stocks had returned just 5.9%. This year, with investors fleeing
both houses and stocks, both probably look like a waste of money. But be careful
about succumbing to what psychologists call recency bias — the tendency to form
beliefs based largely on the most recent observations in a long series of data.
For U.S. investors, reliable data on stocks and houses goes back well further
than 10, 20 or even 50 years.
Stocks returned 7% a year for 200 years ended 2004, according to Wharton
professor Jeremy Siegel. That’s after subtracting an average of 3% a year for
inflation, or the gradual rise in prices of ordinary goods. The plunge in
stock prices
over the past 16 months makes me all the more sure that shares are poised to
deliver good returns over the next decade or two. Houses returned 0.4% a year
over 114 years ended 2004, according to Yale professor Robert Shiller,
co-creator of the most widely used index for house prices. That number is
suspiciously close to zero. Indeed, it might have been zero, reckons Shiller, if
not for two periods of aggressive house buying, one spurred by government
incentives following World War II and another created by the Federal Reserve’s
drastic interest rate cuts in 2002 and 2003.
A zero return for houses might sound odd. An editor who re-published my original
essay at another web site stuck the word “virtually” before zero, I suppose to
soften the message. I made him take it out. If you think about it, zero is the
only logical answer, so long as we’re talking about a single-family house and
not, say, a rental building built to maximize income. Inflation, recall, is the
gradual price rise of ordinary goods. What’s a house if not an ordinary good?
Houses don’t spend their days thinking about ways to make themselves more
valuable. They just sit there. Subtract inflation from their long-term price
increases and there’s nothing left.
Apply heaps of leverage to the numbers if you like, but the outcome only
worsens.
Mortgage rates
now are about as low as they’ve ever been, thanks to more government efforts to,
among other things, spur house buying. But you’ll still pay 5.2% to capture
long-term price increases that merely match inflation. And today, you’ll tie up
a bundle of cash with a
down payment.
I’d rather pay cheap rent instead of an expensive mortgage and put the monthly
cash I save into stocks and other investments. And rent is still plenty cheap,
because . . .
Reason 2: House
prices
have further to fall
Price matters. Few stock investors would think about buying shares of a company
before looking at some measure of how expensive it is relative to the value it
creates. They might look at the price/earnings ratio, for example. Houses have a
price/earnings ratio of sorts — the ratio of their price to the yearly income
they could generate if rented out. In April 2007 I noted that price/earnings
ratios for stocks were only slightly above their historic average, while
price/rent ratios for houses were double their average.
Stock prices were the thing I got wrong. The
price/earnings ratio I gave was correct, but the earnings on which it was based
were far from ordinary. The fierce housing boom was ringing cash registers at
furniture stores, employing heaps of
real estate agents,
padding the profit statements of lenders and, thanks to home equity loans,
puffing up buying power for just about everything. I should have realized that
America’s corporate profit was close to a third above normal levels as a
percentage of gross domestic product. Profits have reverted to average levels,
and stocks have fallen to around 14 times earnings. I recently
cautioned
readers that, even though stocks are fairly priced, it’s natural to assume that
after a long period of above-average prices we can enter a few years of
below-average ones.
Houses still seem expensive, though. One recent survey by Moody’s Economy.com
found that the price/rent ratio in major markets had fallen to 20 from 24 three
years ago, but that for 16 years ended 1999, before the house-buying spree began
in earnest, it had stayed below 15.
Numbers like those should inform not only house-buying decisions, but public
policy. If a citizen is being made poor by the debt they carry on the house they
bought, and if a government policy keeps them tied to that house instead of
separated from it into more affordable housing, are we really helping them?
Reason 3: Many houses for sale today seem designed to waste money
“Most men appear never to have considered what a house is, and are actually
though needlessly poor all their lives because they think that they must have
such a one as their neighbors have.”
Henry David Thoreau
wrote that about 160 years ago in a long, somewhat preachy but also poignant
treatise called "Walden," which argued against materialism and for simplicity.
I’d imagine it applies to today’s houses even more than to ones in Thoreau’s
day.
investors seek to maximize the amount of use tenants can get out of a building,
while minimizing the operating expenses. Single-family house buyers have lately
done almost the opposite, by buying far larger houses than single families need.
From the 1950s to 2006, the average American house size doubled, even as the
size of families shrank. U.S. tax policy rewards house buyers who borrow, not
renters, and not house buyers who pay cash. So naturally, Americans responded by
borrowing, which inflated their buying power and ultimately caused dwellings
themselves to balloon. The “dream of homeownership” became more of an
entitlement to mansion-ownership. But all those mansions on the market do little
for me, financially speaking. They’re expensive to heat and cool, and to fill
with a respectable amount of stuff.
Reason 4: Big houses are targets for future taxes
This year, U.S. government debt will increase by the largest amount relative to
the size of the economy since World War II. Assuming the country will eventually
right its financial course, at least some of that money will have to be paid
back. That means
higher taxes in the future,
and taxes come mostly from people with a proven ability to pay — people with
high incomes and people with large, expensive, easy-to-find assets. There’s only
muted talk of states raising
property taxes
now, since the federal government is working to support house prices. I’m
worried that property taxes will rise sharply in coming years. Of course,
renters pay taxes too, if you figure that landlords merely pass along taxes to
tenants. But renters live in smaller spaces.
I might have titled this reason, "Few people truly own their house, anyway." To
me, owning something is defined in part by not having to pay anymore.
Condo owners
are really renters, if we consider their endless maintenance fees. But house
owners, too, must pay rent to the government in the form of taxes, and must pay
for plenty of ongoing maintenance besides.
Reason 5: Neighborhoods are changing in unpredictable ways
In March 2008, The Atlantic published a frightening vision of what might happen
to America’s suburbs (see "The
Next Slum"). Low-density suburbs, it theorized, may become what
inner cities became in the 1960s and '70s — "slums characterized by poverty,
crime and decay.” I’ve no idea whether anything like that will come to pass. But
the popping of America’s giant housing bubble, and a corresponding shift in
where people find jobs, seems sure to reshape how and where we live in coming
years. For rural folks that might not matter much. (For them, in fact, little of
this might apply, since house prices in rural America have stayed pretty sane.)
But anyone considering a move to the suburbs should do some careful forecasting
before sinking a large portion of their wealth into a house.
I hope all this doesn’t sound alarmist. I’ll surely buy a house one day, when
prices are low enough, and I’ll probably even buy one that’s a little bigger
than I need. But I’ll do so knowing that I’m spending on luxury, not investing.
Also, I hope this doesn’t further the anxiety of readers with mortgage troubles.
The trend of the day seems to be to take an angry tone with people who’ve gotten
in over their heads -- one fellow columnist referred to them the other day as
“deadbeats.” But two other parties deserve a full measure of blame, and I don’t
mean lenders. First, lawmakers have for decades trumpeted house affordability
initiatives like tax breaks, while leaving supply in choice markets constrained.
That inflated demand and ultimately produced the opposite of affordability.
Second, too many people who do what I do for a living spent most of the housing
boom cheerleading instead of doing math. It’s time to stop lecturing renters —
and maybe to ask why public policy treats them as less-worthy citizens than
buyers.
Real Estate
by
Jack Hough (Author
Archive)
|