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Home Prices Increase From June To July

09/29/09 01:05 PM ET   AP

Home Prices

NEW YORK — Home prices rose for the third month in a row in July, new data Tuesday showed, more proof a fragile housing recover is underway.

The Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller home price index of 20 major cities rose 1.2 percent from June to a reading of 143.05. Though home prices are still 13.3 percent below July a year ago, the annual declines have slowed in all 20 cities for the sixth straight month.

"We expected another gain but this is remarkable," wrote Ian Shepherdson, chief U.S. Economist for High-Frequency Economics. He noted the index has risen at an 8 percent annualized rate in the three months to July, the best performance since early 2006.

The index, however, is down about 33 percent from the peak in mid-2006. Home prices are now at levels not seen since the third quarter of 2003. And prices in Las Vegas, Detroit and Seattle are still falling, on a seasonally adjusted basis.

Prices in Las Vegas, one of the most speculative markets during the boom, are down more almost 55 percent from their peak. In August, almost 80 percent of home resales in Nevada were either a foreclosure or a sale below the value of the mortgage, according to a survey by the National Association of Realtors.

The Detroit housing market is reeling from layoffs in the automotive industry. Seattle, by contrast, was one of the last areas to enter the downturn so prices there have yet to hit bottom.

And there are still several risks to the national housing recovery, including rising unemployment and foreclosures and the expiration of a tax credit for first-time homebuyers.

First-time homeowners can qualify for a tax credit worth 10 percent of the purchase price, up to $8,000, but it expires at the end of November. More than a dozen bills to extend the credit have been introduced in Congress, but it's unclear if lawmakers want to continue subsidizing the real estate market.

Real estate agents and homebuilders are lobbying hard for an extension. They point to continued areas of weakness, such as foreclosures. On Tuesday, Fannie Mae said that nearly 4.2 percent of its home loans were at least three months delinquent in July, up from 3.9 percent in June.

Foreclosures now are being driven by job losses, which are also weighing on the minds of consumers. The Conference Board said Tuesday that its Consumer Confidence Index dipped unexpectedly this month to 53.1 after three months of gains, down from the revised 54.5 reading in August.

Nevertheless, there are clear positive trends in the housing markets. Home prices rose in 13 metro areas for at least three straight months. The biggest gains in July were in Minneapolis, San Francisco and Chicago.

The Case-Shiller indexes measure home price increases and decreases relative to prices in January 2000. The base reading is 100; so a reading of 150 would mean that home prices increased 50 percent since the beginning of the index.

Home sales are also rebounding from their January lows. Sales of newly built homes are up 30 percent from the bottom, but are off about 70 percent from the peak of four years ago. Sales of previously owned homes are nearly 14 percent higher, but are still down nearly 30 percent from their peak.

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NEW YORK — Home prices rose for the third month in a row in July, new data Tuesday showed, more proof a fragile housing recover is underway. The Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller home price index of...
NEW YORK — Home prices rose for the third month in a row in July, new data Tuesday showed, more proof a fragile housing recover is underway. The Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller home price index of...
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01:42 AM on 09/30/2009
I think before any meaningful recovery in real estate prices can take root, we need to overcome three major obstacles…
"Rebound Obstacle #1: Inventory Glut. Nearly 10% of all homes built this decade are sitting vacant, compared to a historical average of 2.2%. In total, we’re sitting on almost 10 months worth of inventory versus a historical average of four months.

Rebound Obstacle #2: Loan Resets. Forget subprime. We’ve already worked through 80% of those resets and written down $1.47 trillion in the process. Now we’re facing a $2.5 trillion mountain of Alt-A loan resets. The first big wave hits mid-2011, with the peak expected to come in early 2013.
Rebound Obstacle #3: Foreclosures. One in four homeowners are now underwater. If we break it out by loan type the picture gets worse – 25% of prime loans, 45% of Alt-A loans, 50% of subprime loans are severely underwater. Add in the 6.5 million Americans out of work since the recession began and it doesn’t take an Einstein to predict where foreclosures are heading.”

http://www.housingnewslive.com/articles/reasons-housing-market-going-down.php
01:42 AM on 09/30/2009
Good article...I think before any meaningful recovery in real estate prices can take root, we need to overcome three major obstacles…
"Rebound Obstacle #1: Inventory Glut. Nearly 10% of all homes built this decade are sitting vacant, compared to a historical average of 2.2%. In total, we’re sitting on almost 10 months worth of inventory versus a historical average of four months.

Rebound Obstacle #2: Loan Resets. Forget subprime. We’ve already worked through 80% of those resets and written down $1.47 trillion in the process. Now we’re facing a $2.5 trillion mountain of Alt-A loan resets. The first big wave hits mid-2011, with the peak expected to come in early 2013.
Rebound Obstacle #3: Foreclosures. One in four homeowners are now underwater. If we break it out by loan type the picture gets worse – 25% of prime loans, 45% of Alt-A loans, 50% of subprime loans are severely underwater. Add in the 6.5 million Americans out of work since the recession began and it doesn’t take an Einstein to predict where foreclosures are heading.”

http://www.housingnewslive.com/articles/reasons-housing-market-going-down.php
03:17 PM on 09/29/2009
Yeh 1.3% in twenty citys.
What about the hundreds of citys that are still going down.
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davidwayneosedach
02:35 PM on 09/29/2009
You can still buy a house or condo in Las Vegas for less than it cost to build it.
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porsche996
an inelastic scattering of photons
02:11 PM on 09/29/2009
RIIIGHHT,

I believe this post, sure I do, but somehow my house is now worth $100,000 less than in September 2007. $100,000.
sonoffestus
Got smart & got out!
09:05 PM on 09/29/2009
The house we sold in 2005 is now worth $155,000.00 less than when we sold. We escaped by the hair on our chinny chin chin. We sold in August 05 and the RI market collapsed in October 05.
12:24 PM on 09/29/2009
Oh, goodie for the house-flippers, and whoever is able to pay cash for the foreclosures, fix 'em up, then run with their money...
12:18 PM on 09/29/2009
Has Frank, Dodd and Waters ever explained why they insisted on Everyone owning a home regardless if they could afford it?
11:20 AM on 09/29/2009
Why is this being posted? It doesn't reflect current events.
11:16 AM on 09/29/2009
Any growth in housing spurred by the first time buyer's initiative is unsustainable. The same thing will happen to housing sales that happened to auto sales when the "free" money ran out. The only recovery that is working is the one fleeced by the banks, who were in the position to take our money & run with it. If everyone could remember that the financial sector is not the economy, then we'd have entirely different news stories about filthy rich bankers taking our money to play Monopoly with, while the economy (70% consumer based, & no consumers...) is actually still declining as people hang on to the last of their resources so they can afford to drive to their parent's houses before abandoning theirs and filing for bankruptcy. Sweet recovery.
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08:15 PM on 10/05/2009
excellent points
10:38 AM on 09/29/2009
The disconnect between the problems facing main street and Washington keep widening. For the past year we've heard nothing but talk of regulation, but zero action. What a joke.

good articles... http://www.iamned.com

meanwhile, the stock market is surging and everyone is too busy to counting their money to show any initiative