What Happens to 20Y+ Treasury (TLT) When the Housing Market Crashes?
What happens when US home prices crash? The wealth effect, banking stress, and cascading economic impacts of a housing downturn explained.
How 20Y+ Treasury (TLT) Responds
Scenario Background
Housing is the largest asset class in the United States, with residential real estate valued at roughly $45 trillion, far exceeding the total market capitalization of the US stock market. When home prices decline meaningfully, the ripple effects are enormous. The "wealth effect" is the primary transmission mechanism: homeowners who feel poorer spend less, reducing economic activity. For every $1 decline in housing wealth, consumer spending falls by an estimated 3-5 cents, which may sound small but scales massively across 130 million housing units.
Read full scenario analysis →Historical Context
The 2006-2012 housing crash remains the defining episode. The Case-Shiller national index fell 27% from its 2006 peak, with hardest-hit markets (Las Vegas, Phoenix, Miami) declining 50-60%. The crash destroyed $7 trillion in household wealth, triggered the failure of over 400 banks, and caused the worst recession since the Great Depression. Earlier housing downturns in the early 1990s (following the S&L crisis) saw national price declines of 5-10%, concentrated in the Northeast and California. T...
What to Watch For
- •Existing home sales falling below a 4 million annual rate (recessionary level)
- •Housing inventory rising above 6 months of supply (buyer's market threshold)
- •Mortgage delinquency rates rising, particularly in adjustable-rate mortgages
- •Homebuilder sentiment (NAHB index) falling below 40
- •Home price declines accelerating to 1%+ per month nationally
Other Assets When the Housing Market Crashes
Other Scenarios Affecting 20Y+ Treasury (TLT)
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