Comments on: Real Estate Recession Looming? http://www.brokerforyou.com/brokerforyou/real-estate-recession-looming.html San Diego real estate - San Diego real estate market 'Inside' views & opinion Sat, 12 Jul 2014 10:45:48 +0000 hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=4.0 By: San Diego breast lift http://www.brokerforyou.com/brokerforyou/real-estate-recession-looming.html/comment-page-1#comment-46872 Mon, 10 Mar 2008 16:51:39 +0000 http://www.brokerforyou.com/brokerforyou/?p=49#comment-46872 In 2005 most of the commenters on the real estate market were saying there’s no bubble and our mini boom would never end, this is a sure sign that an end is fast approaching.
Stephanie
San Diego California Plastic Surgeon

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By: Employment Report Negative Surprise . . . for Some » San Diego real estate http://www.brokerforyou.com/brokerforyou/real-estate-recession-looming.html/comment-page-1#comment-31256 Sat, 08 Sep 2007 00:09:03 +0000 http://www.brokerforyou.com/brokerforyou/?p=49#comment-31256 [...] Actually, I have had a total of 12 posts about a real estate driven recession posibility. For ease of reference, they are: Real Estate Recession Looming?, RECESSION?, It’s Always A Good Time To Buy Real Estate!, Bicoastal Housing Recession Forecast By UCSD Economist, Greenspan – Possible Recession This Year!, Seven Year Low in New Home Sales!, Real Estate Bubble Bust … Be Worried … Be VERY Worried, Drop in Housing Values Could be the Factor that Leads Us Into Recession, Real Estate and Construction Misery Dramatically Slows California’s Job Growth, New High for California Foreclosures, U.S. Recession Forcast … It’s on The Way, Surprise HUGE Drop in Pending Home Sales = Regional Recession? [...]

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By: Brian Brady http://www.brokerforyou.com/brokerforyou/real-estate-recession-looming.html/comment-page-1#comment-386 Sun, 05 Nov 2006 05:12:36 +0000 http://www.brokerforyou.com/brokerforyou/?p=49#comment-386 As home prices have risen, an increasing number of homeowners have tapped the equity in their properties one of three ways: via cash-out mortgage refinancing, home-equity loans, or outright sales of their homes. A significant amount of this liquidity has gone to power consumer spending.In a paper published in September 2005, Federal Reserve Board Chairman Alan Greenspan found that borrowing against home equity accounted for 6.9 percent of all personal disposable income in 2004, or roughly $600 billion. That is unprecedented and astounding. Basically, Mama and Dad have used their home like an ATM and the balance in that account is starting to go down!

The volume of home sales has spurred the economy in other ways as well. For example, home sales contribute to overall consumption. When people buy a new home, they tend to make improvements, buy new furnishings and a variety of other home-related purchases. Home sales have also contributed to employment. Over the course of 2004 and 2005, more than a half-million jobs were added in the construction sector, with many of those coming in residential construction and contracting, while nearly 100,000 jobs were created in the real estate sector, according to the seasonally adjusted data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Considering the role the housing market has played in the economy in recent years, any slowdown in the volume of home sales or home price appreciation could weigh on future economic growth. For example, to have a positive effect on consumer spending growth, mortgage equity withdrawals must continue to increase, not decline or even level off. And for mortgage equity withdrawals to continue rising, home values have to rise as well in order to generate unrealized gains for homeowners that can then be turned into cash through the equity withdrawal process. As house prices become more expensive relative to the cost of renting, further price appreciation will become more and more difficult.

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By: Randall Wilson http://www.brokerforyou.com/brokerforyou/real-estate-recession-looming.html/comment-page-1#comment-318 Thu, 26 Oct 2006 07:03:46 +0000 http://www.brokerforyou.com/brokerforyou/?p=49#comment-318 Linking the current market correction to a recession is an approach that I have not seen before. I would however counter that in previous decades the real estate turned as a result of significant economic decline. I use for example the last crash in California in 1989 when the defense contractors pulled out of California and much of the employment base left the state.

In today’s market, I believe that a significant economic slowdown is highly unlikely. As the real estate market has shifted, many investors have simply moved their money back into the stock market; with only a small impact to employment and the national economy.

RW
4MySales.com

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