Tag Archives: home prices

This is What a Double-Dip Recession Looks Like

Still on the fence as to whether the United States is in a double-dip recession?

Data through March 2011, released today by Standard & Poor’s for its S&P/Case-Shiller1 Home Price Indices, the leading measure of U.S. home prices, show that the U.S. National Home Price Index declined by 4.2% in the first quarter of 2011, after having fallen 3.6% in the fourth quarter of 2010. The National Index hit a new recession low with the first quarter’s data and posted an annual decline of 5.1% versus the first quarter of 2010. Nationally, home prices are back to their
mid-2002 levels.

The nationwide index fell for the eighth straight month. Prices have now fallen further since the bubble burst than they did during the Great Depression. It took 19 years for the housing market to regain its losses after the Depression ended. [Source]

And this is what our double-dip recession looks like:

Have you had enough of “Hope and Change” yet?

~Eowyn

US Home Prices to Fall Another 8%

The whole United States is a collapsed housing bubble

Yesterday, we are told that “New U.S. claims for unemployment benefits rose more than expected last week.” It’s almost funny how we are told it’s always “more than expected” — except it’s not really funny. 

Here’s another piece of sobering information about the struggling economy: The housing market ain’t gonna get better any time soon. U.S. home prices are expected to decline another 8%, according to a report by Les Christie for  CNNMoney.com, November 1, 2010. Here are excerpts:

New home sales continue to languish around historic lows, barely exceeding an annual rate of 307,000. Existing home sales did rise to a 4.53 million annualized rate in September, up 10% compared with a month earlier, but are still well below the boom years.

…the housing market still faces many problems: a weak economy, sluggish hiring, tight mortgage underwriting, falling home prices, and slowing sales…. Prime among them are declines in home prices. And while cheaper homes are good for buyers, they also speak to a housing market that won’t stabilize.

Fiserv, a market analytics company, has scaled back its home price projections considerably. In February, it forecast national price gains of about 4% through the end of 2011. The company’s latest prediction is for a 7.1% drop in prices between June 30, 2010 and June 30, 2011. In fact, after five months of gains, prices in the 20 largest metro areas fell 0.2% in August, according to the latest S&P/Case-Shiller report.

The good news is, “There’ll be no vicious, self-reinforcing spiral down,” according to Mark Zandi, chief economist with Moody’s Analytics. But, he added, “more home price declines are coming.” He’s forecasting another 8% drop in home prices through the third quarter of 2011, which will put the total peak-to-trough decline at 34%. Even after that, in 2012, he sees very little price growth.

Home prices continue to fall because sales aren’t taking off. Without buyers, the market can’t bottom out…. Of course, nobody is buying homes when they can’t find jobs. And still more people can’t hang on to their homes because they’re out of work.

Nearly a million homes are expected to be repossessed this year, and analysts seem to be competing to issue the most dire forecast for future foreclosure numbers. Morgan Stanley reported that about 3.1 million borrowers are seriously delinquent with many expected to lose their homes. Zandi said more than 4 million are in trouble with half of those expected to go to foreclosure. And Laurie Goodman, of Amherst Securities, estimates the number of homes in danger of foreclosure at a whopping 11 million.

Real estate analyst Kyle Lundstedt of LPS Applied Analytics said serious delinquencies will continue to spike and will not return even to the current rates — which are already at peak levels — until late 2012 or early 2013. “The housing market is very fragile,” said Goodman.

However, Zandi sees a few factors that are positive. These include: Low interest rates; FHA, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac all lending to qualified buyers; and an improving job picture. Zandi is especially confident that the employment picture is about to brighten. Corporate profits have spiked and, historically, hiring follow profits — with a lag of eight to 10 months. That means companies should start hiring workers very soon, Zandi said.

And once Americans start returning to work, they’ll find home prices are very reasonable. Housing is the most affordable it’s been since the pre-boom years. During the boom, Zandi said, prices were overvalued by about 50%; today it’s close to zero. That has attracted many investors, including foreign buyers. They’ve been scooping up single-family-homes and condos in hard-hit markets like Florida, the Southwest and the Midwest and renting them out. “The reason they’re in these markets is because they see value,” said Zandi.

~Eowyn