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Posts tagged ‘real estate recovery’

17
Dec

Housing Market Recovery

Housing Market Recovery Termination?

Is our feeble housing market recovery about to die because of new administration rules?

housing market recoveryThe real estate industry is holding it’s breath as governmental regulatory agencies are considering a 505 page proposal that will create new rules for bond financing of loans for homes, autos and other assets.

The main government agencies involved are: the Federal Reserve, the FDIC, the Federal housing finance agency, the Department of Housing and Urban Development, the office of the Comptroller of the currency, and the Securities and Exchange Commission. Read more »

17
Jul

New Housing Starts Drop to Ten-Month Low

Housing recovery

Real Estate – Could This Be The End of The Recovery?

housing market

Have you ever noticed in the last couple of years on the majority of economic reports they usually start with a phrase like unexpected, surprisingly, or stunning? Nothing wrong with these adjectives, except for the fact that they always seem to be used on reports that are negative to the economy and naturally ones that the economist predicted would be the exact opposite.

Well, today’s report on new housing starts is no exception. In both the Reuters and the MSN versions, the story starts off using the term unexpectedly fell. Yes, today’s report by the US Commerce Department on new housing starts, show that they dropped to a 10 month low of a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 836,000 units. What effect, if any, will this have on our current housing recovery?

Read more »

21
Mar

Housing Recovery?

Housing Recovery

housing recoveryThis morning the National Association of Realtors reported that existing-home sales fell 0.9% in Febraury to an adjusted annual rage of 4.59 million in February from an upwardly revised 4.63 million in January.

Many economists had expected home sales to have risen in February. Read more »

19
Aug

Was There A San Diego Real Estate Recovery?

Bob Schwartz San Diego Realtor

Bob Schwartz San Diego Realtor

There has not yet been a recovery in the San Diego real estate market!

There was a short head-fake provided by trillions of dollars in taxpayer funds that were thrown at the real estate market by both the Federal government and the fiscally astute, California legislature. Read more »

10
Jun

Real Estate Recovery – A Ways Off

real estate recovery

real estate recovery

The National Association of Real Estate Editors during their annual meeting  shared that continuing foreclosures and an “overhang” in housing inventory will likely prolong the housing slump for several more years.  Home values in many markets are still in decline, said Stan Humphries, chief economist for online real estate search and information company Zillow. And housing demand may not see a normal balance with new household formation and housing starts until 2013, said Doug Duncan, chief economist for secondary mortgage giant Fannie Mae. Read more »

18
Oct

Housing Market Forecast … Don’t Buy The Bull

housing market forecast

housing market forecast

With may ‘experts’ saying we are nearing a bottom – is now the time to buy real estate?

A recovery is going on,  and confidence will return if it is sustained … and the jobs issue will work itself out. Yes, looks like times are changing. Just one major problem …home foreclosures are accelerating as moratoriums on foreclosures, resets, and unemployment hit home owners harder and harder. Plus, commercial real estate looks like it will be a repeat of the residential real estate story. Read more »

27
Sep

Is California Housing About to Recover? Time for A Reality Check!

San Diego California housing market

San Diego California housing market

The worst part of the housing decline is yet to come. Seasonality. I think that one word pretty much sums up what most optimists have mistaken for a resurgent housing market. There is the next tsunami of foreclosures just starting and have yet to peak (best guess – Summer of 2011), bank failures have yet to peak, the dollar crises is building, the true unemployment number is somewhere north of 20%. There will be no recovery on the backs of home owners for a long time to come. It will take many years for the housing sector to return to any semblance of normality.

Plus, The dollar crisis is building.

When it hits, interest rates will rise dramatically as the US struggles to finance its massive budget and trade deficits while the rest of the world tries to escape a depreciating dollar.

Since the spring of this year, the value of the US dollar has collapsed against every currency except those pegged to it. The Swiss franc has risen 14% against the dollar. Every hard currency from the Canadian dollar to the Euro and UK pound has risen at least 13 % against the US dollar since April 2009. The Japanese yen is not far behind, and the Brazilian real has risen 25% against the almighty US dollar. Even the Russian ruble has risen 13% against the US dollar.

What sort of recovery is it when the safest investment is to bet against the US dollar?

spot gold price
17
Aug

Housing Recovery Requires An Employment Recovery

www.brokerforyou.com

www.brokerforyou.com

It’s amusing to read  the prognosticators repeating the industry party line of a San Diego real estate market bottom and  to buy now before one misses this great opportunity. Are the ‘talking heads’ just overly optimistic, espousing on unfounded hope, lies, or just ignorance?

The key to long-term house prices was, and will remain, incomes. Long-term, buyers can afford about three times income, assuming they don’t have too much other debt. Discussions on how much prices have dropped (Gee, it’s down 50% so that MUST mean it won’t fall any more!) are not of great interest if that’s all there is to the discussion.

Unemployment continues to collapse (-250k jobs is horrid, though merely less horrid than -600k jobs). Lending is tight. Consumers are still heavily in debt.

Let’s assume we get growth in 2012. Will the Fed start raising interest rates by then? Probably. If the deflationary forces of contracting credit abate and the inflationary forces of printing start to take hold, we could see rates rise sharply from 2012 to 2020. What will happen to house prices with mortgage rates at ten to twelve percent??

13
Apr

San Diego Housing Turnaround

San Diego housingSan Diego real estate market… I have the idea that many think our economic downturn will last forever, near capitulation point, so all the doom and gloom today, is to be expected. Even though I'm more optimistic than some, a mid-2009 recovery seems a bit early to me; late '09 or sometime in '10 seems more likely.

In Orange County Calif., housing economist Mark Schniepp said:

Home sales sharply higher (to their highest levels since October of 2005). Prices appear to be stabilizing in some areas; overall, prices during February were not off as sharply as they had been. For the state, off only 2.2 percent from January. We appear to be at bottom in prices or nearly at the bottom; it is a regional issue now.

It is not surprising that 1st time buyers are jumping in. For years they were crowded out by speculators armed with easy money. There is certainly a segment of pent-up demand.

All the same, the stock market appears to be bottoming out. It's getting pulled down by uncertainty more than anything; once that uncertainty is removed, it will start to recover.   San Diego real estate agents

15
Feb

Housing Bust – Who Really Lit The Fuse & How To Cure It!

San Diego real estate market - housing bust

There has been lots of finger pointing and conjecture over whom or what started our housing melt-down. Was it social engering, Democrat favoritism, Republican lack of regulation, or something else?

I believe the question can be put to rest by facts from one of the most liberal newspapers, the venerable New York Times. On September 30, 1999, the New York Times ran a story by STEVEN A. HOLMES, titled: Fannie Mae Eases Credit to Aid Mortgage Lending.  I’ll quote a few key parts of this story that will illuminate the true cause of our current housing/economic bust:

“In a move that could help increase home ownership rates among minorities and low-income consumers, the Fannie Mae Corporation is easing the credit requirements on loans that it will purchase from banks and other lenders.”

“Fannie Mae, the nation's biggest underwriter of home mortgages, has been under increasing pressure from the Clinton Administration to expand mortgage loans among low and moderate income people and felt pressure from stock holders to maintain its’ phenomenal growth in profits.”

''Fannie Mae has expanded home ownership for millions of families in the 1990's by reducing down payment requirements,'' said Franklin D. Raines, Fannie Mae's chairman and chief executive officer. ''Yet there remain too many borrowers whose credit is just a notch below what our underwriting has required who have been relegated to paying significantly higher mortgage rates in the so-called subprime market.''

“In moving, even tentatively, into this new area of lending, Fannie Mae is taking on significantly more risk, which may not pose any difficulties during flush economic times. But the government-subsidized corporation may run into trouble in an economic downturn, prompting a government rescue similar to that of the savings and loan industry in the 1980's.”

As we all now know, the prior quote from Mr. Holmes’s article proved to be quite prophetic.  Quite prophetic.

It seems ironic that a Democratic administration put us on the melt-down path, and now another Demetronic administration with a number of the same lawmakers still in place, is devising a plan to pull the economy out of the second worst economic decline in history.

The housing market is now at the center of our economic woes. However, housing does not need a knee-jerk government response of throwing billions at it with hope of turning it around, or at least finding a bottom. In San Diego, CA and other ‘bubble’ cities, we have seen a marked pick up in home sales over the past few months. I attribute this to two main factors: exceptionally low mortgage rates combined with many bank owned/foreclosed homes priced to move.

On October 1, 2008, I published a blog post entitled  #1 EZ Fix to The U.S. Housing Market.  This was my simplistic, but in my opinion, a totally effective way to stop the declining home values and build a base for future housing appreciation.  Further. we can do it without direct government expenditures. Below is what I said in that post.  I still believe that it would work today, especially in light of the natural pick up sales over the past few months:

The U.S. government’s Wall Street bailout package, or should I use the PC correct term of “Government Rescue Program,” is not only a bad deal for the U.S. taxpayer, but in my opinion, totally unnecessary.

Last week, the largest Savings and Loan in the United States, Washington Mutual, was taken over in one day in a very, very smooth transaction.  Combine that with the fact that in most real estate boom cities last month, real estate sales showed a dramatic increase.  Of course the increase was due mainly to buyers purchasing bank owned and REO properties, but these two examples show that our free economic system works.  When the price is right, buyers will step up and in many cases, purchase properties above the current asking price.

I think the general public, and Realtors in particular, have to a acknowledge that the boom years of 2000 to 2005 took real estate prices to artificially high levels due to the easy money, easy loan qualifying standards.  Rather, should I say “lack of credible standards?”  Now we are going through the payback period.

For the government to come in now with this huge bail-out, would just prolong the housing decline.  I would rather see the government stand aside and let the market forces determine the true area average home selling prices.

For those who think a government intervention is the only way out, I would say do it without direct taxpayer money.  The undisputed key to this recovery is housing.  If the government truly wants to ignite a fire under the housing market, I personally would propose a very simplistic approach that would have immediate results.

The government should pass a bill that allows any home purchaser, owner-occupied or investor buyer, who buys a residential property within the next two years and holds that property for a minimum of three years (and a maximum of ten) to be free of federal capital gains taxes upon selling the property.   The potential, tax-free profits on my idea would be a huge incentive for investors to jump back into the residential housing market.  This increased demand would clear the built up housing inventory in a matter of months for most areas.

If the government is going to rescue anyone with this new bill, the rescue efforts should be directed not at Wall Street, but at Main Street.  The problem today is declining home prices and the built-up inventory of properties for sale.   Many buyers are standing on the sidelines.  Most investors are totally out of the real estate market.  My proposal will solve these problems without spending taxpayer funds.                                                                  San Diego real estate market blog