Written By:
Ingo Winzer, President
Local Market Monitor
The
economic recession only lasted a year, but there wasn't a recovery for homes
because prices had climbed much too high and builders had built way too many of
them. Prices had to fall, not just
back to a "normal" level, but to an even lower level so that the large inventory of excess homes could be
moved - a sort of clearance sale. We're
not yet done with that sale - see the large number of mortgages still
delinquent - but enough has been cleared out so that prices can drift up to a
more normal level.
The
accuracy of home price statistics is questionable
right now, because of the large number of foreclosure
sales, but the overall situation is clear.
Prices are up in 42 percent of the
315 markets we cover, falling in just 9 percent. A year ago, prices were up in 14 percent of our markets, still falling
in almost half. The corner has
definitely been turned.
How
quickly this housing recovery will proceed is still not clear, however, because
of the tenuous finances of homeowners
- whose $500 billion of equity loans keeps them out of the housing market - and
the slow pace of job growth that
deters new home buyers.
The
number of jobs in May was up 1.6 percent over last year. Jobs were up 0.4
percent in manufacturing, 1.7 percent in retail, 1.9 percent in health care,
3.3 percent in restaurants, and 3.6 percent in business services. Government
jobs were down 0.3 percent because of big
cuts at the federal level.
About
45 percent of the 2.1 million new jobs created in the past year are in fields
like retail, restaurants and health care that pay low wages. (The overall percent of low-paying new jobs is much
higher.) The people who have these job will not be buying a house, they will be
renting. We are in for a long period
where renting is the preferred option of new job holders.