Despite record affordability of homes, buyers are still spooked and staying on the sidelines

I think what alarms me the most about this article is how 40% of existing home sales are distressed. It’s also very interesting to note how high the percentage of cash buyers who are investors or foreigners. On a positive note, if investors and cash buyers are pulling the trigger and comprise 40-60% of the market, perhaps prices are closer to a bottom nationally than we think. Once the first time home buyers start stepping up, the market will probably only move higher.

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For real estate, a giant spring clearance sale

Despite record affordability of homes, buyers are still spooked and staying on the sidelines

ap

A sign at the Sunset Ridge Estates alerts buyers of special incentives when buying a KLM home in Richmond, Ill, Friday, March 25, 2011. (AP Photo/David Banks)

Michelle Conlin, AP Real Estate Writer, On Friday March 25, 2011, 3:02 pm EDT

In suburban Chicago, it’s paradise to be a homebuyer.

At the Millbrook Pointe development in quaint and pristine Wheeling, a $269,000, brick-and-stone townhouse comes with $25,000 in free upgrades, including wood-burning fireplaces, all-stainless steel kitchens and marbled bathrooms tricked out with double-bowl vanities and whirlpool soaker tubs.

Down the highway at the Patriot Place golf course villas in Bolingbrook, buyers are lavished with lawns sodded to perfection, absurdly low seller financing and a year of free insurance that will pay the mortgage if you lose your job.

At the Sunset Ridge estates, the amenity bonanza gets even more surreal: Buy a customizable colonial for as little as $170,000 and get a brand new, $17,000 Chevy Cruze. The 2011 model. For free.

Spring for home-sellers is like Christmas for retailers — peak season. Normally, that might mean a few giveaways. A better brand of siding here. An expanded choice of tile color there. But a new car? “Obviously, business has been soft,” says Kim Meier, president of KLM Homebuilders, the company offering the promotion.

The festival of upgrades on new homes — especially in the housing markets that were savaged by the subprime meltdown — is queasy confirmation of just how much the housing market remains the sickest part of the U.S. economy.

Existing home sales plunged nearly 10 percent in February to their lowest level in nine years. It was the largest drop since July. Forty percent of those sales were on distressed properties. And new home sales are on track to come in at just 250,000 this year, the fewest since the Kennedy administration, when there were 120 million fewer people in the United States.

“What is discouraging in many markets is that it appears as if some of the local builders are creating the volume,” says Wayne Yamano, vice president with John Burns Real Estate Consulting.

Across the country, real estate agents are reporting a rise in traffic at open houses. But they say buyers are reluctant because of the shellshock they suffered after the free-money machine blew up in everyone’s face. The foreclosure epidemic. The plague of employment insecurity. The fear that the U.S. is on a downward slide. They’re all playing into buyer commitment phobia, brokers say.

There’s also confusion over the conflicting signals. Prices are low, but unemployment is high. Mortgage rates are attractive, but lending standards are strict. Renting is newly chic. “Everybody is now self-loathing about how we’re greedy Americans and we shouldn’t want to own homes,” says Jonathan Miller, CEO of real estate consulting firm Miller Samuel.

The U.S. will certainly have a spring home buying season this year. But even if sales rise as usual, they won’t pull the zombie housing market out of its stupor. Nationwide, forecasters expect house prices to drop at least 5 percent more this year. And no one in housing land is murmuring about anything like price stabilization until 2012. At least. “We don’t expect a dramatic rebound,” says Paul Ashworth, managing partner at Capital Economics. “We expect stagnation for several more years.”

The housing problems certainly aren’t easing. Foreclosures are expected to peak this year. A third of homeowners owe more than their homes are worth. Normally the number of people with negative equity is 5 percent. And strategic defaults, where people simply walk away, are rising.

The buying that is happening isn’t coming from first-time homebuyers. A recent study by Capital Economics found that 60 percent of sales are to foreigners and investors, most of them paying cash. In fact, in international real estate circles, the U.S. is viewed as the “new emerging market,” says Thomas M. Shapiro, president of global real estate investment firm GTIS Partners.

Foreigners are attracted to U.S. real estate because their local currencies are so much stronger than the dollar. Investors are also attracted to the properties because rents are rising. “You don’t get much money from buying Treasurys as safe investments,” Ashworth says. “There is a search for yield that is making residential property look more attractive.”

Real estate is hyper-local. The places hit hardest by the foreclosure epidemic — California, Arizona, Nevada, Utah and Florida — are certainly skewing the statistics for the worse. In places like New York City, Washington, D.C., and San Francisco, the real estate market is strengthening and can almost seem exempt from the national malaise. That’s because the job market in those cities — dominated by finance, the federal government and the tech sector, respectively — remains robust compared with the rest of the nation.

“If you have a secure job and the economy around is growing, then it’s a great time to buy,” says Barbara Corcoran, a New York real estate investor and analyst. “That’s not true in too many places, but you can see improvement in certain pockets.”

Adds Tara-Nicholle Nelson, director of consumer education at the online real estate search firm Trulia.com: “It’s like a big spring clearance sale on real estate.”

Todd Leykamp, 29, works in TV production in Los Angeles. He and his girlfriend have been casing the open-house market for six months. They pay $1,200 a month for their Hollywood rental and can afford to double that payment if they buy a house. But he says they have yet to find The One. “There are just too many factors, and every time you find one you love, there are 10 more out there you haven’t found that you’ll love just as much,” Leykamp says.

Worse news for sellers is that buyers don’t think the housing market has hit bottom yet, according to Truila.com. A recent survey by Trulia and Harris Interactive found that nearly 70 percent of renters who aspire to being homeowners say they will wait at least two years before buying. And nearly 60 percent say a housing recovery won’t come until after 2012.

“Many are reluctant to purchase a home even if they have the means because of the uncertainties in the economy,” says Celia Chen, a housing market analyst at Moody’s Analytics.

It’s clear that many sellers are panicked. A quarter of sellers who listed their properties on Truila.com on March 1 have already slashed their prices at least once.

Last summer, Bobby Barweki started looking for a foreclosure to buy. Barweki, 30, scraped together a 20 percent down payment by living with his parents after graduating from college in 2007. The foreclosures he looked at were all “trashed,” he says.

Then one day his dad sent him an email about the free-car deal at Sunset Ridge Estates.

Barweki, a store manager at Chicago recreation goods chain Novotny Sales, just closed on a $178,900 ranch. He has a 4.875 percent interest rate on a 30-year-loan. Instead of getting the new car, he opted for $17,000 worth of free upgrades, including a stone facade and hardwood floors. Barweki doesn’t have much faith in an economy where the definition of a recovery seems to be that things don’t get worse. He says all the new jobs are low-paying. And he doesn’t think the housing market has hit bottom. But for him, it was the right time. “Interest rates are low, I had the money, and I got a great deal,” Barweki says.

The U.S. has already suffered one “lost decade” in housing. Now some economists are worried that the country could be in for another. “It could be 10 to 15 years before you are going to get back to peak levels,” says Zillow.com chief economist Stan Humphries.

AP Real Estate Writers Alex Veiga in Los Angeles and Derek Kravitz in Washington, D.C., contributed to this report.

Source: http://finance.yahoo.com/news/For-real-estate-a-giant-apf-479853388.html?x=0&sec=topStories&pos=7&asset=&ccode=

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New home sales fell 16.9% in February

I found this very interesting as far as a pulse on the national housing market. In addition to the article below, I heard on CNBC that new homes are selling at a 40% premium to existing homes (many of which were new construction just a few years ago). Historically CNBC says new construction homes sell at about a 15% premium. A soft market for existing homes and the glut of foreclosures that seem to be hitting the market again at an accelerating pace is spelling big trouble for home builders. New home prices are going to have to come down for sure and there is probably not a whole lot of profit margin for home builders at current prices. Many think this is one of the first signs of the dreaded double dip in housing.

I’ll just add that these numbers are national and probably don’t have much corrlication to San Francisco where the market seems stable and in a modest recovery.

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New home sales fell 16.9% in February

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) — New home sales fell 16.9% in February, to the lowest level since the government began keeping records in 1963, as the reeling housing market failed to generate any momentum.

Sales fell to an annual rate of 250,000 from the revised 301,000 in January, according to the Census Bureau’s monthly report released Wednesday. The rate was down a whopping 28% from the 347,000 of February 2010.

“We’ve been running at a very low level,” said John Canally, an economist with LPL Financial, a Boston-based financial adviser.

The release followed Monday’s downbeat report on existing home sales, which fell 9.6% month-over-month.

“New home sales are even more crucial to the nation’s economy,” said Canally “It’s the new home sales that actually drive economic activity and contribute to GDP.”

New home builders hire construction workers and buy building materials from domestic sources, contributing much more to the economy than people just trading one existing home for another.

Weather factor

Particularly bad winter weather this year probably added to market woes. Sales dropped precipitously in the Northeast and Midwest, which experienced some frigid and snowy days during the month. Sales, though, were down across the board, falling in all four regions.

A better sign for the market was the number of new homes in inventory. That remained at 186,000 in February, a 40-year-plus low, according to Canally and only about a third of the number of new homes on the market during the peak months off 2006.

The drop is a positive but limited sign for the market. New homes compete with existing ones for buyers and there’s still a big inventory overhang of those. In addition, there’s a “shadow inventory” of foreclosed homes repossessed by banks and not yet put back on the market.

“One of the biggest detriments to building new homes is the flow of existing foreclosed homes,” said David Crowe, chief economist for the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB).

Right now, there does not seem to be any reasons to think that new home sales will recover anytime soon. The builders certainly are not optimistic.

The widely used gauge of builder confidence, the NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing market index, stood at 17 this month. That was up from single digit levels of two years ago, but still well below the 50 mark. When it is below 50, more builders rate market conditions as poor than as good.

Source:

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Florida Housing Market at 18% Vacancy

Wow, does not look like things are going to recover any time soon in the Florida housing market. He’s an article that says 18% of the homes are vacant and there is enough excess housing supply for almost the next 10 years.

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Nearly 20% of Florida homes are vacant

It’s not always easy to feel sorry for sunny Florida. But it just got hit with another blow.

On Thursday, the Census Bureau revealed that 18% — or 1.6 million — of the Sunshine State’s homes are sitting vacant. That’s a rise of more than 63% over the past 10 years.

Having this amount of oversupply on the market will keep home prices depressed and slow any recovery.

During the housing boom, Florida was among the hottest real estate markets in the nation. Homes were snapped up by the state’s growing population as well as hordes of investors confident that prices would continue to soar.

“You’d drive through downtown Miami and see 30 or 40 cranes sticking up in the air,” said Michael Larson, a housing market analyst for Weiss Research.

The bust brought an end to that. Development ground to a halt. Retirees stopped relocating. And prices started falling and vacancies rising.

“Housing went from being the preeminent investment of choice to toxic waste,” added Richard DeKaser, an economist with the Parthenon Group.

The vacancy problem is more dire in Florida than in any other bubble market: In California, only 8% of units were vacant, while Nevada, the state with the nation’s highest foreclosure rate, had about 14% sitting empty. Arizona had a vacancy rate of about 16%.

In Florida, the worst-hit county is Collier — home of Naples — with a whopping 32% of homes empty. In Sarasota County, 23% of the housing stock sits vacant, while Lee County (Cape Coral) has a 30% vacancy rate. And Miami-Dade County has a vacancy rate of about 12%.

The housing recovery will take years, perhaps many years, to complete, according to Ingo Winzer, a housing market analyst and founder of Local Market Monitor.

Not helping is the the fact that the state’s rate of population growth slowed in the second half of the last decade to just 5.7%. Still, the 2000s saw the state population grow overall by nearly 18%, the Census Bureau reported. I

“It will take about eight years just to put the vacancy numbers back into the single digits,” said DeKaser.

The inventory overhang has sent home prices plunging. The median price for homes sold in January was just $122,000, according to the Florida Association of Realtors. That was down 7% from 12 months earlier and less than half the price at the peak of the market.

Winzer thinks prices in Florida will drop even more, another 5% in 2011 and 3% in 2012. “Even after that, they’re not going to rebound, they’ll just sit on the bottom,” he said.

Celia Chen, a housing market analyst for Moody’s Analytics, is also downbeat in her forecasts for Florida. Not only will prices fall another 11%, she said, but the bottom won’t hit until mid-2012, about a year later than the nation as a whole. Some metro areas won’t get back to their pre-recession peaks until long after the present owners are old and gray.

She doesn’t expect Naples, for example, to come all the way back until the late 2030s. Other Florida metro areas with a 20-year wait or longer include Punta Gorda, Palm Bay and North Port.

“If you’re buying in Florida for retirement,” said Winzer, “maybe you buy next year when prices will be near the bottom. If you’re buying for investment — don’t.”

Source: http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Nearly-20-of-Florida-homes-cnnm-2507768369.html







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Q2 2010 Investment Commentary

 

This is the link to the report:

Q2 2010 Outlook

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