From the category archives:

Demographics

Housing: a good long-term bet

by drm on September 13, 2010

I’ve been preparing for a conference this week held by the investment bank DeSilva & Phillips. The concept is intriguing: the principals, Reed Phillips and Roland DeSilva, have invited eight CEOs of mid-market media companies to talk about the transformations in their business to an audience of about 100 members of the private equity and media banking community.

Ironically, the context for transformation is crisis, as the publishing segment of the media sector has been under extreme duress during the recession. While this duress has taken a toll on the capital structure of media companies, it has also forced business to focus, identify where their customers are and develop more flexible and web-centered business practices.

In preparing for my presentation, I’m forced to answer two basic questions: what is attractive about our company, Network Communications, Inc., and what is attractive about our market.

When you are positioned squarely against the housing market it’s easy to fall in to the trap that your market is a problem.

Perhaps the best way to disabuse people of that notion is to show them two charts.

housing market.jpg

The first looks at home prices since 1970. It is the simplest way of capturing the impact of the housing bubble. For a short period of time,home prices soared irrationally. What we know now is that the loans made against those soaring house prices helped fuel a fever in lending to the entire building market — resale, new homes, multi-family and commercial — that created an unimaginable glut of capacity just when demand was going to decline.

When we take a long view of prices, it is easy to conclude that the market has fallen back close to the norm, and that with a little more correction, the housing market will be where it need to be.

The drama of the price drop over-simplifies the dynamic impact the housing market has on the economy. The best way to measure that impact is to look at the effect of housing on Gross Domestic Product over time.

The second chart captures all components of housing as a percentage of GDP since 1970 and plots the ratio against the logarithmic trend. This analysis shows that housing as a percentage of GDP is significantly below its trend over the past couple of years.

Closer analysis of the number shows that the driver for reduced production in the housing sector is the overhang of excess capacity, coupled with conservatism in the lending markets.

The most volatile component of the housing sector is residential fixed investment, which includes the cost of building new homes and multi-family units, improving existing homes and paying commissions on the sales of homes.

From 1995 to 2005, residential fixed investment increased $319 billion to more than $700 billion.

Between 2005 and 2010, residential fixed investment declined $424 billion.

Historically, residential fixed investment has been about 5% of GDP. Currently it is at 2.7%. At the normalized rate, residential fixed investment would be around $650 billion, or 85% higher than current levels and 15-20% below the peak.

Has anything happened to change the long-term structural dynamics around residential investment? Not really. There are more efficient building techniques, and the overall size of structures is likely to diminish, but the demand for residential fixed investment is driven by the population’s housing need. Population grows, existing housing stock ages, bylining costs come down, and new capital pours in as part of a virtuous cycle.

The current challenge of the housing market is that the alignment between supply and demand still is not set. Demand is suppressed because of the weak employment market and frozen lending channels; supply is too strong because of the overhang of building during the housing boom.

Each quarter the housing market regulates a little bit more, and a recovery in the housing market is not that far away.

At that point, it will be clear that housing is a good market opportunity, with steady growth characteristics that will distinguish it during a particularly challenging decade for our transforming economy.

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The cheapest food in the world

by drm on July 5, 2010


I was struck the other day by the observation that the start of our current recession was sharper than the Great Depression and that the steps taken by governments around the world to provide financial stimulus helped to moderate the decline.

That observation got me thinking about how different the images of this recession are from the images of the Great Depression.

The New York Times had a long article in the Week in Review section this week that captured some of the underlying difference.

A great many people have lost faith in powerful institutions, from Congress to Goldman Sachs. Yet beneath the bitterness coloring national affairs — down at the level of neighborhood, family, coffee shop, tavern — a tenuous belief in the collective good remains, perhaps moderating national dismay.

I don’t think that the Times article intended to demean the level of suffering and pain that individual people a experiencing during this downturn. But they captured something of the zeitgeist that I experience as a I travel around the country. People are carrying on, often with a tremendous amount of energy and a degree of mobility and connectedness that is unmatched by any time in our history.

That perspective made the chart above particularly powerful.

One dramatic difference is the relatively low cost of food in the U.S. compared to other places in the world. The affordability of food is driven by diverse factors, including vast natural resources of our country, federal subsidy programs, efficiencies in distribution and innovations in preservation.

And compared to other countries, there’s no other place on the planet that has cheaper food than the U.S. (2008 data here). The 5.5% of disposable income that Americans spend on food at home is less than half the amount of income spent by Germans (11.4%), the French (13.6%), the Italians (14.4%), and less than one-third the amount of income spent by consumers in South Africa (20.1%), Mexico (24.1%), and Turkey (24.5%), which is about what Americans spent DURING THE GREAT DEPRESSION, and far below what consumers spend in Kenya (45.9%) and Pakistan (45.6%).

When you don’t worry about where your next meal comes from, you can afford to feel optimistic and energetic. The relatively low cost of food in our country is an important element in keeping that positive viewpoint up

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Marking the start of a new generation of women in leadership

April 26, 2010

We’re at the cusp of an amazing cultural shift: the majority of women under 40 within 10 years will be better educated and better paid than men of equal age.
That means that the role of women‘s advocacy organizations in business is not only to strive for equality; it’s to help women prepare for the [...]

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Does the new healthcare plan contain disincentives to buy insurance?

March 23, 2010

One of my favorite reads is the blog

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The shift in education and income demographic is a harbinger of future change

March 23, 2010

The past few weeks, hidden beneath the clamor about healthcare reform (a word I use loosely), there’s been a lot of interesting data and commentary around gender, class, earnings and income.
The highlights: More women are better educated than men, higher earnings accrue to people with more education and less educated people have less [...]

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The scale of the Internet, 2009

March 2, 2010

A timely update of internet statistics, with commentary from Jeremiah Owyang at his blog, here.

JESS3 / The State of The Internet from Jesse Thomas on Vimeo.
The video was designed by the agency Jess3. Their blog is a fun place to spend some time — they do a lot of cool graphics and data visualization [...]

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