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Daily Real Estate News | January 8, 2008
Existing-Home Sales to Hold Steady in Early 2008
Over the next few months,
existing-home sales are expected to hold fairly steady as indicated by pending sales activity, and then rise later in the year and
continue to improve in 2009, according to the latest forecast by the National Association of REALTORS®.
Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist,
says there is a pull and tug exerting itself on the market.
“On the one hand, we have a pent-up demand from the four million jobs
added to our economy over the past two years of sales decline,” he says. “On the other, consumers continue to wait for additional
signs of market stabilization. There are more people with financial capacity now than in 2005, but many are trying to market-time
their purchase. As a result, the exact timing and the strength of a home sales recovery is a bit uncertain. A meaningful recovery
in existing-home sales could occur as early as this spring, or it may be further delayed toward late 2008.”
The Pending Home Sales
Index, a forward-looking indicator based on contracts signed in November, fell 2.6 percent to a reading of 87.6 from a strong upward
revision of 89.9 in October, but remains above the August and September readings and indicates a broad stabilization. The index was
19.2 percent below the November 2006 level of 108.4.
“Although there could be some minor slippage in the first quarter, existing-home
sales should hold in a narrow range before trending up,” Yun says.
Across the Region
Regionally, the PHSI showed the following:
Existing-Home Sales Forecast
Existing-home sales
for 2007 will probably total 5.66 million, the fifth highest on record, then edge up to 5.7 million this year and 5.91 million in
2009, compared with 6.48 million in 2006. Existing-home prices for 2007 are likely to be down 1.9 percent to a median of $217,600,
hold even this year and then rise 3.1 percent in 2009 to $224,400.
“Rising home prices in the affordable midsection of the country
are likely to offset declines in some of the previously hot markets,” Yun says.
There are wide variations in housing market conditions
around the country, with nearly two-thirds of the metropolitan areas showing price gains. Healthy increases in metro prices are occurring
in places such as Pittsburgh; Beaumont-Port Arthur, Texas; San Jose, Calif.; and Bismarck, N.D.
“Our consumer survey shows buyers today
are in it for the long-haul, planning to stay in their home for a median of 10 years,” Yun says. “This is a wise approach to housing
because the data shows the longer you own, the better your investment.”
New-home sales are projected at 773,000 for 2007, and declining
to 669,000 this year before rising to 730,000 in 2009. However, that is well below the 1.05 million 2006.
With an appropriate slowdown
in production, housing starts — including multifamily units — are forecast at 1.36 million for 2007 and 1.09 million this year before
edging up to 1.1 million in 2009. Starts totaled 1.8 million in 2006.
The median new-home price should drop 2.1 percent to $241,400
for 2007, and then rise 0.4 percent to $242,200 this year and gain another 5.9 percent in 2009.
Call for Legislative Action
“Some policy
changes, such as raising the loan limit on conventional mortgages, would provide a significant boost to home sales, increase liquidity,
strengthen home prices and lessen foreclosures, but it is unclear as to if and when the measure will be implemented,” Yun says.
NAR
strongly supports raising the Government-Sponsored Enterprise loan limit to at least $625,000 from the current $417,000 so that more
consumers will have access to lower interest rates on safe conforming mortgages.
“NAR estimates that raising the GSE loan limit will
result in interest rates savings for an additional 330,000 home owners,” Yun adds.
NAR also encourages the Fed to make a single lump-sum
cut in the Fed funds rate to 3.5 percent at the January Federal Open Market Committee meeting, rather than a series of modest cuts
throughout the year.
“Consumers are also looking to market-time interest rates, and the expectations of further rate cuts are pushing
some home buyers to delay,” Yun says. “Monetary policy will be much more effective with a one-time large cut, rather than a series
of small cuts.”
The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage is expected to rise slowly to the 6.3 percent range by the end of this year, but an
additional cut in the Fed funds rate would lower short-term interest rates.
Meanwhile, growth in the
After averaging
4.6 percent for both 2006 and 2007, the unemployment rate is estimated to rise to 5.3 percent in the second half of 2008. Inflation,
as measured by the Consumer Price Index, is projected at 2.9 percent for 2007 and 3.1 percent this year; it was 3.2 percent in 2006.
Inflation-adjusted disposable personal income is forecast to grow 3.1 percent for 2007, the same as in 2006, and then grow 1.6 percent
this year.
— REALTOR® Magazine Online