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Posts tagged ‘real estate values’

29
Jul

5 Reasons For A Real Estate Double Dip

housing market values

housing market values

1. In almost all zip codes today the total economic cost of home ownership notably exceeds the total economic cost of renting. For only a small minority is this unimportant; for them the psychic benefits of ownership are real and large.

2. The majority of owners and potential owners are pessimistic about any real increase in home prices over the next five years; many are of the view that the effective purchasing power of equity congealed in a residence will actually decline over the next decade, compared with other real stores of value Read more »

10
Dec

Home Values Down For 2009

housing market

housing market

According to a just released report from the Zillow website, U.S. home values fell by $489 billion in the first 11 months of 2009. Although this is a huge value decline, it’s actually an improvement from 2008, when home values shed $3.6 trillion.

Zillow’s chief economist, Stan Humphries said: “Home values stabilized significantly during the second half of 2009, with the total dollar value of U.S. homes increasing since June.  Most housing markets across the country had a good summer, spurred largely by the government’s tax credits for homebuyers, combined with very low mortgage rates.”

Read more »

25
Aug

Home Prices Move up 3% in Second Quarter

San Diego home

San Diego home

Standard & Poor’s/Case Shiller’s national home price index increased almost 3 percent to 133 during the second quarter, compared to the first quarter — though it remains 15 percent lower than second-quarter 2008. National home prices are down about 30 percent from their peak in 2003.

Even with this better-than-expected report, all of the 20 cities in the index are lower than a year ago. Still, it’s too early to celebrate … with about 5.5% of all home mortgages seriously delinquent in their monthly payments.

San Diego Little Italy condominiums

24
Feb

National Home Price Index Drops 18.5%

 

San Diego real estate marketThe S&P/Case-Shiller 20-city report on home prices showed a decline of 18.5% in December 2008 from the same month a year earlier.

The index has fallen every month since January 2007. Home prices fell 18.2% in the fourth quarter of 2008, the largest drop in its 21-year history. The average price of a home has dropped by more than 25% after peaking in 2006.                                                                               San Diego real estate market

  Related posts by other bloggers:

talk | discussion | StreetEasy New York Real Estate Search – Discussing 'National – Home Sales and Prices Drop Again, 45% of Sales Distressed'. email updates · RSS National – Home Sales and Prices Drop Again, 45% of Sales Distressed. 1 comment. nyc10022. about 3 hours ago. ignore this person …

DallasDirt » Blog Archive » Case-Shiller: Biggest Home Price Drop … – 2000 was when Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller National Home Price Index first started tracking home sales, but the drop is significant. However, this very cool interactive widget from the NYT allows you to find your city — Dallas is one …

Jan. home sales fall again nationally, fall steeper in St. Louis … – If you haven’t seen yet, a new batch of existing home-sales data came out today from the National Association of Realtors. Sales fell, again, down 5.3 percent from December and by 8.3 percent compared to January of last year. …. You’ll really see prices drop the longer the depression goes on. At some point, many who want to sell but don’t have to will eventually cave and finally reduce their prices. Just becuase new houses are still high doesn’t mean the builders are …

30
Dec

Home Values Fall 18% in October

The Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller 20-city housing index dropped a record 18 percent from October last year. This is the largest drop for the index since its inception in 2000. The smaller 10-city index also tumbled 19.1 percent, its biggest decline in its 21-year history.

Both of these indices have recorded year-over-year declines for 22 straight months. None of the 20 cities in the Case-Shiller index saw annual price gains in October — for the seventh consecutive month — and 14 of them posted record year-over-year declines.

Three metro areas with the largest drops were Phoenix with almost a 33% drop, Las Vegas with nearly a 32% fall, and San Francisco witha 31% decline.

Also today, the Conference Board's Consumer Confidence index dropped to 38 in December from a revised 44.7 in November, well below the expectation of 45 of economists surveyed by Thomson Reuters.

Recent prior related posts:

Home Prices Plunge in 3rd. Quarter

Home Value Index – Largest Drop In History

Real Estate Record Home Price Declines

San Diego Real Estate – 5th Largest Decline Through July

Survey Says Home Values Must Fall Another 14%

May Home Prices Take Biggest Drop Ever

La Jolla Bank Owned Foreclosure

11
Nov

Subprime Loan Perspective – Interview with Former Golden West Financial CEO

Another view on the subprine home loan mess from an industry insider. This is a serious interview with the former head of Golden West (i.e World Savings) that was bought by Wachovia in 2006:

[youtube]Ea607qcIiZo[/youtube] 

Prior related posts:

Jumbo Financing and the Impact on The San Diego Real Estate Market

Home Builders Pushed 100% Loans to Move Properties

Housing Values Will Cause Hundreds of Banks Will Fail

Summary of the “Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008

President Bush Signs Historic Housing Bill

San Diego City Attorney Wants City To Be Foreclosure Sanctuary

Reworked Subprime Loans … 40% End Up Defaulting

Fed Approves New Rules For Mortgage Loans … Too Little Too Late

Housing Slump Will Go Continue at least To 2009

Nation’s Mortgage Lender Records Loss of $2.2 BILLION +$1.1 BILLION Charge Off

 

 

 

21
Oct

Next … Direct Housing Bailout?

housing bailoutNational Association of Realtors and the National Association of Home Builders are calling for another stimulus package aimed directly at assisting home buyers. Well, why not? We are bailing out Wall Street, foreign investors, banks & insurance companies.

Why not?  The recent pick-up in real estate sales in the last few months show that the system works without government interference. In any area, when home prices reach a level considered to be good buy, people will step up and buy.

Sooner or later, housing prices, like water, will find their own level. That level is what people can afford to pay, not what the government can borrow and lend to them to make a down payment. Unfortunately, in many areas, it appears that we are still some distance away from housing prices finding their level.

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.  

Some prior posts on the government bailout:

Real Estate Bailout Bill — How They Voted

So Much For The Bailout

Housing Bailout & Your Vote

#1 EZ Fix to The U.S. Housing Market

Emergency Rescue Package – The Devil’s in The Details

Are the Rating Agencies at The Cause of Our Financial Mess?

Housing Bailout – The Real Cause?

Government Bail-Out – Risk & Reward

Summary of the “Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008

Second Home Foreclosure Tax Penalty

san diego commercial real estate

 

14
Mar

Does the National Association of Realtors really need an economist?

San Diego California real estate marketI've been a member of the National Association of Realtors (NAR) for over 30 years and I'm hard-pressed to remember the Association forecast being anything but overly optimistic.I'm also a member of the San Diego Association of Realtors and the California Association of Realtors.   I have nothing against realtor associations but I do have an issue with these associations putting out an economic forecast.  How can any forecast done by an economist who is an employee of a trade association, whose mantra is “It's always a good time to buy real estate," possibly put out an accurate forecast for real estate trends if those trends are anything other than positive.So is the association actually benefiting, or for that matter, providing proper guidance to the general public by issuing continued rosy forecasts. 

Only occasionally are the forecasts sprinkled with a milk-toast opinion of possible market slowing.The real estate-buying public is becoming more sophisticated and is able to access multiple sources of information through the Internet. It's my opinion that the constant overly optimistic outlook of the National Association of Realtors’ chief economist is making the association and all its members look foolish to say the least.

In February of 2005, then NAR chief economist Mr. Lereah published a book with an exceedingly long title.  This book is titled: “Are you missing the real estate boom?  The boom will not bust and why property values will continue to climb through the end of the decade — and how to profit from them.”  Shortly after the publication of this book, many real estate markets including San Diego's, took a decidedly downward trend which has continued through to today.NAR’s December 2005 forecast for 2006 said existing home sales would fall 3.7% and new home sales would fall by 4.8%.  What actually happened, from data released in December 2006, existing home sales fell 8.6%, more than twice the NAR is forecast, and new home sales fell 17.8%, which was almost 4 times more than the predicted forecast.

In December 2006 the chief economist for the NAR said: “Most of the correction in home prices is behind us, but general gains in value next year will be modest by historical standards.” It was stated in this report that existing home sales were expected to be off 1% and new home sales to fall 9.4%.  What actually occurred for 2007 was that existing home sales took a fall of 12.3%, and not the 1% predicted by the NAR.  New home sales were down about 25%, again, off from the original 9.4% decline projected by the National Association of Realtors.

Now for 2008, the NAR is projecting existing home sales will rise very slightly, and the median home price should also rise.  Also projected is that new home sales will continue to fall sharply in the range of about a 12% drop.  The report also speculates that for the largest part of the market, existing home sales, the bottom has come, and 2008 will be a turning point.

Is the NAR's current projection, likely to occur?  With the Fed dropping interest rates hand over fist, I think there is a 50-50 possibility that finally NAR’s forecast may be close to reality.  If the housing market numbers for 2008 come anywhere close to NAR’s projection, will it vindicate the necessity for the association having an economist on staff?  To me it's kind of like a broken clock; it will be correct at least twice during a 24-hour period.

Personally I believe the NAR should leave the forecast up to the government and the Wall Street economists and just report the actual housing numbers.  Let's face it; it's not always a good time to buy real estate.  Let's try to enhance the general public’s perception of Realtors by sticking to the facts, and leaving the projections and forecast to others.   San Diego California Realtors