If you've been reading any national news publications lately, you know that its hard not to find depressing news about the real estate market on a national level. Data is data. The great news is that all recently released data points to continued stable gains in the DFW area. This article by Martin Crutsinger, AP Economics Writer was too good not to post. Please read below. I'd invite any comments or discussion as well.
By MARTIN CRUTSINGER, AP Economics Writer WASHINGTON - Housing prices, slumping after a five-year boom, are projected to decline in more than 100 of the nation's metropolitan areas, with the Northeast, Florida and California among the areas hardest hit.
The forecast by Moody's Economy.com, a private research firm, presents one of the starkest views yet of the housing slowdown that has been gathering force in recent months. The West Chester, Pa. The forecast is included in a 195-page report, "Housing at the Tipping Point," which The Associated Press obtained before its general release on Wednesday. The report projected that 133 of the nation's 379 metropolitan areas would suffer price declines. Those metropolitan areas with declining prices account for nearly one-half of the value of the nation's stock of single-family homes. The price declines represent quite a contrast from the past five years when low mortgage rates pushed sales to five consecutive annual records and prices in the hottest sales areas skyrocketed. But this year, the once red-hot housing market has cooled significantly. Some analysts are worried that the slowdown could become so severe that it could drag the entire country into a recession, much as the bursting of the stock market bubble in 2000 led to the 2001 slump. The housing report said the biggest percentage price decline will be in Danville , Ill. The second biggest decline is projected to occur in the Fort Myers , Fla. The 133 areas with slumping prices are concentrated in the states of California Florida Maine Washington D.C. Nevada Arizona Detroit Of the areas with falling prices, 73 were forecast to hit their low point by the end of this year with the rest seeing a trough for prices in 2007 or later. But even in areas which have already hit a low point, the rebound in prices is not expected to occur quickly. "Prices are going to go down and stay down for awhile. It will take at least a couple of years to work off the excesses of the last decade," said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Economy.com and the principal author of the report. Not all parts of the country will experience price declines. The report said Texas Florida It projected that annual price gains over the next two years would average 4.2 percent in the Dallas area, 3.3 percent in the Charlotte, N.C., area and 3 percent in the Columbus, Ohio, area. The report said the most vulnerable areas for price declines were those regions where red-hot markets attracted speculators known as "flippers" who purchased homes in hopes of selling them fast for a quick profit. "Housing's downturn has turned even more dramatic with the rapid flight of the flipper from the market," the report said. "These investors have gone from sending home sales and prices shooting higher to driving sales and prices lower." The report described the current environment as a "correction" and not a "crash," but it cautioned that there were downside risks that could make the slowdown more serious. A big threat is that the fall in home prices could have a significant impact on consumer spending patterns. The so-called wealth effect pushed consumer spending higher during the housing boom as soaring home prices made homeowners feel more wealthy and thus more inclined to spend money. But falling home prices could have the reverse effect and depress consumer spending. "We believe the housing downturn will weigh on the economic expansion but will not break it. But there are risks," Zandi said. The slowdown in housing occurred as a result of a two-year campaign by the Federal Reserve to push interest rates higher as a way of slowing the economy enough to keep inflation under control. The Fed has kept rates unchanged for the past two months and many economists believe the central bank has finished its rate hikes as long as inflation pressures keep falling. The belief that the current economic slowdown is restraining inflation has helped push mortgage rates lower with the 30-year mortgage now at a six-month low of 6.31 percent, an improvement that is expected to help put a floor on housing's fall.





Dennis,
What a great article. As real estate professionals it's so important to have understanding of the market place as a whole, even if it's outside our normal work center.
Posted by: brittmorris | October 25, 2006 at 02:27 PM
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Posted by: Sage Realty | June 21, 2010 at 02:08 AM