The housing market may be slowing down, but new homes are still a complicated, expensive process, mostly because of supply chain issues. One Bank of America analyst, who co-authored a new report on residential construction, says it\u2019s like a game of whack-a-mole. He says: \u201cEvery time they find one thing that they fix, another one pops up.\u201d
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BofA just released its 2022 \u201cWho Builds the House\u201d report, which found that a shortage of building materials is one of the primary reasons for higher home prices. According to co-author Rafe Jadrosich, prices have risen at an \u201cunprecedented rate\u201d over the last few years because of the shortage of building materials. He told MarketWatch: \u201cThere\u2019s always a new category that\u2019s creating the bottleneck.\u201d (1)
"Who Builds the House?"
The report says that the cost of materials to build a home went up 42% in just three years, from 2018 to 2021, and that it has consistently outpaced the rate of overall inflation. Additional costs for materials add approximately $35,000 to the price tag, and bring the total amount for raw materials to around $118,000. That\u2019s about a third of the cost of a new home. The other two-thirds of the cost go towards the land, and the labor, which can vary from region to region.
Rising inflation is also contributing to higher costs for all the things needed to finish a home including window treatments, floor coverings, appliances, and household furnishings. MarketWatch reports that the index for household furnishings and operations rose .04% in May with an annual rate of increase of 8.9%.
The BofA report used data from the National Association of Home Builders, and analyzed 14 different expense categories, to determine how much it costs, on average, to build a new home.
Framing Lumber and Engineered Wood
The dominant category is the lumber needed to frame a home. Nine out of ten homes are framed with lumber. That can be natural wood or engineered wood, which is a mixture of wood fiber and plastic. The report says 30.2% of the material used to build a home falls into this category. The cost for this portion is about $35,500, and right now, lumber prices are falling. But they\u2019ve also been on a roller coaster. Lumber futures have come off a high of about $1,700 for a thousand board feet in May of last year. They were recently down to about $580, but in April of 2020 they were half that amount.
Lumber prices are moving contrary to inflation because of a drop in home sales, and a cut back in home starts by builders. Home starts dropped a whopping 14.4% from April to May due to a slowdown in construction for both single-family and multi-family homes.
Higher mortgage rates are contributing to the housing market slowdown. Housing experts are predicting that lumber prices will come down farther, but builders are still dealing with high prices for other materials.
Concrete for the Foundation
Concrete accounts for another big expense category at almost 9% of the total cost of materials. It typically costs around $10,500 for the concrete.
Windows and Doors
Windows and doors are a big expense. They account for another $10,500 or about 9% of the cost of materials, but those costs are under pressure because windows and doors are consistently hard to find. Builders have been scrambling over the last year to get what they need to finish homes.
As Jadrosich explains, if you haven\u2019t installed the windows: \u201cYou can\u2019t put your appliances in, or paint your walls, or finish your floors.\u201d He says until that situation improves, \u201cyou\u2019re gonna have a pretty slow, elongated build cycle for a lot of the home builders.\u201d A recent New York Times article says it all in the title: \u201c4 Bed, 3 Bath, No Garage Door.\u201d
((One of our RealWealth development projects experienced this kind of supply chain issue last year. The developer had to drive to another state to get the garage door he needed to finish the home.))
Other Materials
Other materials that builders must get their hands on include siding, plumbing, cabinets, HVAC systems, roofing, flooring, structural panels, wallboard and drywall, appliances, architectural coating, fiberglass insulation, and paint.
Housing Market Slowdown
Chief Economist for the NAHB, Robert Dietz, said in a recent press release that the cost of building a home is up 19% year-over-year. He says it\u2019s due to \u201ca variety of building inputs, except for lumber, which has experienced recent declines due to a housing slowdown.\u201d (4)
And builders are not happy. The NAHB does a monthly survey on builder confidence, and it\u2019s been lower for six months in a row. Dietz says it\u2019s a \u201cclear sign of a slowing housing market in a high inflation, slow growth economic environment.\u201d He says: \u201cThe entry-level market has been particularly affected by declines for housing affordability and builders are adopting a more cautious stance as demand softens with higher mortgage rates.\u201d He\u2019s calling on the government to create policies that support the supply-side of the housing market.
Housing Shortage
According to Freddie Mac, the U.S. needs an additional 4 million homes to keep up with demand. Since many people can\u2019t afford the high cost of homeownership, they will continue to rent. There\u2019s a problem that needs to be fixed in the housing market, but people need housing, and what\u2019s filling the gap right now are rentals.
If you\u2019d like to learn more about how the economy is impacting the housing market, check out my recent webinar. It\u2019s my Q2 2022 Housing Market Update. You\u2019ll find it at newsforinvestors.com under the \u201cLearn\u201d tab.
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Thanks for listening. I'm Kathy Fettke.
Links:
2 -https://www.nytimes.com/2022/02/15/upshot/homes-garage-door-shortage.html