Primary market

Real Estate Outlook: Balancing the News

Sometimes bad economic news comes at you so hard and fast that you forget to notice some of the more encouraging trends that may be underway, like super low mortgage rates, record-setting affordability, new tax credits, and big sales increases in the boom-to-bust real estate markets of Florida, California and Nevada. Now, this is not to brush aside or minimize any of last week"s sobering national economic news. Consumer confidence is way down and it"s a serious psychological impediment to home buying. Rising unemployment is scary. And the fact remains, someone won"t consider buying if they are afraid of losing their job. And of course shaky banks and big losses on Wall Street are all part of the same worrisome picture. There are, however, some genuinely positive developments out there. Let"s start with housing affordability. What will ultimately get the turnaround ball rolling will be the ability of ordinary consumers, in large numbers, to afford to buy a home with their current incomes at current mortgage rates. And right now, the affordability equation is at its most favorable point in decades. In local markets across the country, more households with median incomes can now afford to buy the median-priced house than at any time since 1970, when the National Association of Realtors first began its "Housing Affordability Index." Thanks in part to rising household incomes and continuing declines in the prices of housing being sold, the index jumped by 3 points in January alone and now stands at its all-time record high. Here"s another significant trend that gets almost no media attention: Almost all economists agree that a huge obstacle standing in the way of a housing recovery is the big overhang of unsold houses in inventory in many local markets. But inventories have been steadily declining over the past couple of months, and in January alone dropped another 3 percent to the lowest level in more than two years. We are burning off the excess unsold supply of houses clogging local markets -- and that bodes well for stabilizing prices in the months ahead. Add in Congress"s new $8,000 nonrepayable tax credit for buyers who haven"t owned a house during the past three years and you"ve got the potential to pull hundreds of thousands of people off the sidelines and into the market during the remainder of 2009.

RES Course Provider commented:

Everything has some neative and positive aspects, it is better to choose the positive side and ignore the negative one where the Real Estate matter is concerned.

05.04.2012


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):

News of the day
Is This Upset Buyer Naive or Cunning?
First-time buyer Teresa Aldana says her older home is turning into a money pit, and that she wasn"t treated fairly by her agent or the seller. Calling everyone she can think of from attorneys to the local TV station, she wants some financial help getting some repairs completed on her home which she claims were not disclosed by the seller. She didn"t get her own inspection done on the home and chose to accept the seller"s and agent"s word that the home was in good repair and that her new home warranty would cover any problems, she says.
Popular Articles

Real Estate Slow Down Not Weakening Work Load for Landscape Architects
The housing market slowdown hasn"t affected the majority of landscape architects" business, according to the American Society of Landscape Architects (ASLA).

I Dream Of Cocoa Beach, Say Florida Homebuyers
Part of the "Space Coast," Cocoa Beach first came to national prominence as the setting for the television show "I Dream of Jeannie," and the area has done nothing but become more enchanting, say local Realtors.