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Archive for January, 2007
The LOW INTEREST RATES today……will offset any decline in housing price tomorrow. .IF rates rise!! Buyers LOCK in today - at the low rates…..and insure you will be ahead tomorrow!
Second Consecutive Rise Points to Limited Fallout From Market Slump in 2007
By CHRISTOPHER CONKEY, WSJ.com
WASHINGTON — Sales of existing homes rose for the second consecutive month in November, a sign of rebounding demand that suggests the economic fallout from the housing market’s slump will be limited next year. The National Association of Realtors said sales of existing homes last month increased 0.6% from October to an annual rate of 6.28 million units, down 10.7% from a year earlier. Spurred by lower interest rates and home prices, sales have now increased in back-to-back months for the first time in more than a year.
Together with a recent upturn in the rate of new-home sales, the modest rise in existing-home sales indicates that home-buying activity may be stabilizing after a yearlong downturn. ”The change was small, but the results were encouraging nonetheless because they suggested activity is beginning to form a bottom” said Michael Moran, chief economist at Daiwa Securities America Inc.
If the housing slump is indeed bottoming out and starts to reverse itself in the months ahead, it would gradually lift a great weight off the broader economy. Housing-related industries have been shedding thousands of jobs in recent months, and builders have been forced to scale back construction to match waning demand. That has been a major factor behind the slowing economy this year, and many economists say growth — now running at an inflation-adjusted annual rate of about 2.0% — won’t fully bounce back until the housing correction has run its course.
Of course, it is far from certain that the housing slump is over. Inventories of unsold homes remained large in November, with a 7.3-month supply on the market at current sales rates, according to NAR data, up from a five-month supply a year earlier. That suggests builders will continue to cut production until supply is better aligned with demand. In the meantime, large inventories will continue to put downward pressure on prices.
Last month’s median home price — the price at which half of homes sold for more and half sold for less — was down 3.1% from a year earlier. November was the fourth month in a row that median home prices were down from a year earlier. NAR President Pat Vredevoogd Combs described current conditions as a “window for buyers” to re-enter the market. Go to Courtney Silverman’s website to look at local inventories in Broward County, Florida.
Additional support for a rebound is coming from the competitive labor market, which is producing solid wage gains and lifting consumer sentiment. As with the recent data on housing, which generated more relief than enthusiasm among economists, the improved sentiment reading was due more to a moderation in pessimism than any surge in optimism. More than anything, the data suggest the nation’s economy will be able to maintain its current pace of slow-to-moderate growth as the housing imbalance is corrected. “There’s nothing signaling a severe downturn or a severe upturn,” said Lynn Franco, who oversees the Conference Board survey.




