For a complete description of the reasons and methodology for making this substitution, please see What's the Real CPI?
With year-over-year home prices flattening, the effect of substituting the Case-Shiller housing index for Owners' Equivalent Rent in CPI calculations has worn off as the following charts show.
CS-CPI vs. CPI-U
click on chart for sharper image
OER vs. Case-Shiller Housing Index
click on chart for sharper image
My friend "TC" who produced the charts had this to say...
CS-CPI ? January 2010What the charts shows is how low real interest rates were (and thus the Fed Funds Rate was) between 2003 and 2006. Greenspan missed the negative real interests that fueled the housing bubble by focusing on rent as opposed to housing prices.
CS-CPI has risen YOY for the third month in row and measures +2.4% YOY. Meanwhile the government?s CPI-U also has risen YOY three consecutive months and measures +2.6% YOY (see first graph). The divergence between the two is to due to using the Case Shiller 20 city index, rather than the government?s housing metric of Owners? Equivalent Rent (OER). The OER now makes up an amazing 25.2% of CPI, it's heaviest percentage on record.
While the divergence was huge during the housing boom (due to OER underestimating home prices) and even wider during the housing bust (due to OER overestimating home prices), it is now relatively small.
January 2010 OER is at +0.4% YOY, while the Case-Shiller 20 city index for January will likely read -0.3% YOY for only a 70 basis point divergence as noted in the second chart.
Likewise, starting in 2007 real interest rates were high, even after Bernanke cut rates to zero.
With home prices stabilizing and OER falling, CS-CPI and CPI-U are tracking together. Moreover, real interest rates which had been positive since mid-2006 (as measured by CS-CPI), are once again negative.
Yet, If housing takes another turn down and OER continues to drop (both of which I suspect will happen), we can easily see the Fed Funds Rate, CPI-U, and Case-Shiller CPI converge towards zero, especially if energy prices drop as well.
That deflationary combination is not what Bernanke is hoping for at all.
Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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