http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Global_Economy/HI27Dj02.htmlEvery day, another economist claims that the impact of the slowdown in housing on the US economy has been overstated; a few months ago, many still disputed that there even was a housing bubble. There has been a housing bubble, the bubble has only started to deflate, and it may have very negative long-term implications for the US economy as well as the US dollar.
Almost every day, a high-profile company directly or indirectly targeting the US consumer warns that its outlook is bleak. Let it be Yahoo warning about advertising revenues; let it be Dell's warning that its eternal rebate programs cannot push sales any more; or let it be the automakers that sell many of their brands at prices below last year's level, yet are still unable to boost volume. All these incidents are linked to the US consumer; and US consumer spending, in turn, is very closely linked to the health of the housing market. It also comes as no surprise that so far this year, the US dollar has fallen significantly versus a basket of currencies.
Home-building activity has collapsed, with some builders reporting as many as half their orders canceled. The volume of homes sold has declined and inventories are up. Home prices have - so far - held up reasonably well, mostly because the cost of long-term mortgages has been reasonable; while short-term interest rates have risen, interest rates on longer-term loans have in some instances even come down.
As a result, the squeeze on consumer spending has been relatively mild and limited to a squeeze on homeowners who have been dependent on adjustable rate mortgages who have seen their rates rise; beyond that, the squeeze has been on home owners who have employed their homes as automated teller machines - these owners are dependent on eternally rising home values to finance their spending.