Pub. 3 2021 issue 1
11 especially when compared with 2019, and so was the demand for U.S. petroleum products. How strong is the recovery? In early September 2020, the different regions of the U.S. had recovered but are still, at best, between 80% and 85% of what they were. However, Utah is doing better than the nation as a whole when it comes to unemployment and PPP funds. Consider unemployment first. Some states see year-over percent employment changes that are as steep as -5.9% to -9.9%, but Utah is at -0.9%. The only state doing better than Utah is Idaho, at -0.5%. The U.S. is now at -6.4%, but that’s where Utah was in April when the U.S. averaged about -13.5%. Who has been hit the hardest? Eastern and red states are the worst. Places that are doing well now, like Utah, were doing well when the nation went into recession, were hurt less initially and got more than their share of PPP help. However, not all of Utah is doing equally well. Natalie called Utah’s recovery K-shaped. Cache County has unemployment rates of 3.4%. In contrast, San Juan County has unemployment rates as high as 12.8%. Other hard-hit counties include Grand County (12.6%), Uintah (12.2%), Garfield (12.0%) and Duchesne (10.6%). When it comes to PPP funds for companies with less than 500 employees, Utah is in the top tier. As of Aug. 8, 2020, PPP and cancellations were ≥ 21% of the total annual payroll. For comparison, the nationwide average was 19.4%. The hardest-hit industries between September 2019 and September 2020 were tourism (-15.7%) and energy (-11.6%). In contrast, construction grew by 6.6%. Single-family construction was the most successful area in construction. It peaked in 2018 at 6,846 units, fell in 2019 to 5,861 units, and started rising again in 2020 to 6,422. The story is a little different for apartments. Apartments had 3,186 permitted units in 2018, and they were gaining on single- family homes. That growth accelerated in 2019, where the number for single-family homes was 5,861, and the number for apartments was 4,834 — a difference of only 1,027 units. But in 2020, they pulled apart again. The number of new apartments fell to 3,585. The difference between the number of new homes and the number of new apartments increased to 2,837. In other words, the pandemic may have shifted the market away from apartments and toward single-family homes. Despite all these building projects, Utah’s housing shortage continues to grow and would have still occurred even if there hadn’t been a pandemic. Utah was short 53,100 units in 2019, but the deficit was 15,381 a decade ago. The construction industry set record levels of new housing construction between January 2020 and July 2020. At the same time, there has been a historic low when it comes to for-sale inventory. For-sale inventory usually rises during the spring and summer and then decreases during the fall and winter. That wasn’t true in 2020. Inventory peaked in May and fell sharply in August. Instead of a list of approximately 9,000 or 10,000+ homes, the number was 5,183. (In August and September 2016, there were about 10,540 homes. These were maximums. The minimums in September 2019 and August 2018, respectively, were 9,836 and 9,347.) The sold-to-active ratio also showed stress. Its usual pattern is similar to the pattern of for-sale inventory: the ratio of sold to active listings has a maximum value at 50-60% during the spring and summer, then decreases during the fall and winter to about 35-42%. In 2020, the sold-to-active ratio dropped from about 55% in March to about 43% in April. Then it increased sharply to about 98% in July. The big problem is affordability. Consider housing price appreciation in three categories between August 2019 and August 2020: • The mortgage rate went down 0.68%. • Monthly payments went up 3.74%. • The median sales price went up 13.03%. What lies ahead? That part isn’t clear. Recovery may take all of 2021, or we might improve by mid 2021. However, Natalie quoted an Indian writer named Arundhati Roy, who won the continued on page 12 How strong is the recovery? In early September 2020, the different regions of the U.S. had recovered but are still, at best, between 80% and 85% of what they were. However, Utah is doing better than the nation as a whole when it comes to unemployment and PPP funds.
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