Housing market is stabilizing

Chapdog

Abreast of the situations
By Alan Zibel, AP Business Writer
WASHINGTON — Bucking conventional wisdom, a trade group for real estate agents said Monday that the battered housing market is on the verge of stabilizing and inched up its outlook for 2007 and 2008 home sales.

The revised monthly forecast from the National Association of Realtors, which followed nine straight months of downward revisions, calls for U.S. existing home sales to fall 12.5% this year to 5.67 million — the lowest level since 2002. Last month, the association predicted 5.66 million existing homes would be sold this year.

The Realtors' group also forecast sales will rise slightly in 2008 to 5.7 million, up from last month's prediction of 5.69 million.

Numerous other economists are far less optimistic than the trade group. They predict weak sales and falling prices through next year and beyond and emphasize that those problems could worsen if the economy sinks into a recession.

Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Economy.com, predicted at a housing forum last week that, if the economy slips into recession or if efforts to prevent foreclosures don't pick up substantially, the housing market downturn could last through the end of the decade.
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The trade group's chief economist, Lawrence Yun, cited job growth and the replacement of subprime lenders to borrowers with weak credit with government-backed loans as reasons for the improved outlook.

"Despite over-exaggerated negative coverage on the housing conditions, many local markets are actually seeing price increases," Yun said at a press briefing. "Mortgage availability is improving"

The trade group also said its index that forecasts near-term home sales inched upward in October. The trade group's seasonally adjusted index of pending sales for existing homes rose 0.6% to 87.2 from an upwardly revised September index of 86.7, but was down 18.4% from a year ago — the third-largest year-over year decline on record.

The Realtors group also said the median price for U.S. existing homes — the point at which half sold for more and half for less — will sink 1.9% to $217,600 this year and rise 0.3% next year to $218,300.

If median prices fall this year, it will be the first price decline in the nearly 40 years that the trade group has tracked that data.

Other ways to measure national housing prices, such as the S&P/Case-Shiller index, have already shown price declines.
Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
 
The national association of realtors has no incentive for such a prediction, do they?
 
i know some of yous guys want to see housing continue to crash along with the economy for some reason. but lets face it. housing is soft and correcting now but its a necessity. Food, Energy, Housing.. these industries never stay down for long.
 
I keep track of my town and at peak of my towns correction there were like 180 homes on market. now its down to around 75 so things definitely turning around here. But then again we corrected earlier then other areas.
 
so let's just run out and get a sub prime mortgage. They are still legal I think.

Could the number of houses on the market be dropping for some other reason ?
 
you could post a 6% increase in xmas spending and 3% growth and the recessionista's here would still find something to cry about.
USC is keeping his streak of moronic post going.
 
actually rates are down big time. u can get a 30year fixed for 5.75 or so. 15year for 5.25.

refinancing going to come back strong once rates fall further.
 
But if the housing market is doing so well, why drop rates further ?

remember we have other issues to address with interest rates. The dropping value of the dollar for instance.
 
i know some of yous guys want to see housing continue to crash along with the economy for some reason. but lets face it. housing is soft and correcting now but its a necessity. Food, Energy, Housing.. these industries never stay down for long.


Its NOT a want Chap its a realising of facts.

The right denied this was a problem during the entire time people were warning about it , then once it was undeniable they admitted it and now they are trying to just wish it away.

We are tired of denial and wishing problems away. We want adults at the helm again.
 
I perdicted a big problem when the Deregulation was approved allowing this debacle to happen.
We learned nothing from the Depression, the S&L scandal, Milken junk bonds, etc...
Those regualtions were in place for a darned good reason.
 
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The republicans party leaders KNOW full well the lessons. They like the results and fools just keep falling for what they SAY they will do and ignore the results of what they really do are.
 
Its NOT a want Chap its a realising of facts.

The right denied this was a problem during the entire time people were warning about it , then once it was undeniable they admitted it and now they are trying to just wish it away.

We are tired of denial and wishing problems away. We want adults at the helm again.

People have been predicting meltdown since 2002. If you keep predicting the same thing year after year you are going to be right eventually. The UCLA Anderson school which gets quoted the most in California has been predicting the meltdown since 2002 as homes prices continued to grow in the meantime.

You are making this a political issue and I can't say I've seen Republicans stating 'the housing market is great' and Democrats stating 'the housing market sucks' thoughout the 2000's. To a partisan I guess that's how you can view things but the market is a bi-partisan or non-partisan issue.
 
The republicans party leaders KNOW full well the lessons. They like the results and fools just keep falling for what they SAY they will do and ignore the results of what they really do are.

And your recommendation would have been?
 
Its NOT a want Chap its a realising of facts.

The right denied this was a problem during the entire time people were warning about it , then once it was undeniable they admitted it and now they are trying to just wish it away.

We are tired of denial and wishing problems away. We want adults at the helm again.

i disagree. i think this is merely a correction. the demand is still there.
 
Mine would have been to keep the rugulations in place on banking that had kept this from happening for many many years.
 
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