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Home Sales November 2009: New Home Sales Down - Is Housing Headed For A Double-Dip?

ALAN ZIBEL   01/ 5/10 05:28 PM ET   AP

New Home Sales December

WASHINGTON — The number of people preparing to buy a home fell sharply in November, an unsettling new sign that the housing market may be headed for a "double-dip" downturn over the winter.

The figures Tuesday came after a similarly discouraging report on new home sales, illustrating how heavily the housing market depends right now on government help.

In October, buyers raced to get contracts signed in time to take advantage of a tax credit for first-time homeowners that was set to expire. It has since been extended into spring – and now prospective buyers are taking their time.

The National Association of Realtors said its seasonally adjusted index of sales contracts fell 16 percent from October to November, ending nine months of gains. Economists surveyed by Thomson Reuters had expected only a 2 percent drop.

"This was bound to happen at some point, although not by this much," wrote Jennifer Lee, senior economist with BMO Capital Markets. She added: "Gulp."

When the tax credit expires this spring and the government phases out programs to keep mortgage rates low, the housing market will have to stand on its own. Many economists doubt it can.

"We're just going to languish at the bottom," said Anna Piretti, senior economist at BNP Paribas.

The last housing downturn helped drag the nation into the worst recession in decades. The expected dip in home sales and prices this winter appears to pose less of a threat to the broader economy.

Orders to U.S. factories, for example, posted a big gain in November, the Commerce Department said Tuesday. So while the housing market remains vulnerable, makers of steel, computers and chemicals are mounting a surprisingly robust rebound.

"We expect housing to just limp along even as the rest of the economy is growing fairly strongly," said Nomura Securities economist Zach Pandl.

Stocks were mixed as the reports offered conflicting signals about the economy. The Dow industrials slipped 0.1 percent, while the broader Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 0.3 percent to its highest close since Oct. 1, 2008.

The tax credit is worth up to $8,000 for first-time homebuyers and was set to expire Nov. 30. Congress extended it through the end of April and broadened it to include a credit of up to $6,500 for buyers who relocate.

Typically, there's a lag of one to two months between when the contract is signed and when the sale closes. To meet the original deadline for the tax credit, buyers would have needed to submit a signed sales contract by the end of October at the latest.

The Realtor group said it expected homebuyers to start responding to the extension by early spring, suggesting that sales will pick up again but fall back later in the year, once the government support is gone.

In addition, the Federal Reserve is buying up $1.25 trillion in mortgage-backed securities to help keep interest rates at or near record lows. That program is scheduled to run out at the end of March, though a sudden jump in rates could force the Fed to extend it.

"We don't want to see mortgage rates rise yet," said Jerry Smith, associate broker with Re/Max Professional outside Denver. "And we certainly don't want to see unemployment get any worse than it is."

For November, new sales contracts were down 3 percent in the West, 15 percent in the South and 26 percent each in the Northeast and Midwest.

The housing market had been rebounding from the worst downturn in decades, helped by the federal intervention. Sales of existing homes surged in November to the highest level in nearly three years, but analysts expect a drop of 10 to 20 percent from November to December.

The most pessimistic analyst forecast came from Daniel Alpert, managing director of the New York investment bank Westwood Capital LLC. He expects prices to fall to 10 percent below the lows of last spring when the government help goes away.

Nevertheless, in some particularly hard-hit areas real estate agents are confident the worst days of the housing bust are over.

Charlotte Wester, a real estate agent with US Preferred Realty in Mesa, Ariz., said homes are so affordable – one house in her area sold for under $50,000 last fall – that houses are drawing multiple bids and often selling over the listing prices.

"I can't see how our prices could get any cheaper," she said.

___

AP Economics Writer Martin Crutsinger contributed to this report.

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WASHINGTON — The number of people preparing to buy a home fell sharply in November, an unsettling new sign that the housing market may be headed for a "double-dip" downturn over the winter. The...
WASHINGTON — The number of people preparing to buy a home fell sharply in November, an unsettling new sign that the housing market may be headed for a "double-dip" downturn over the winter. The...
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11:03 AM on 01/20/2010
ITS GOING TO DROP OUT THE BOTTOM SOON SO HOLD ONTO YOUR HATS LETS SEE WHO THEY BAILOUT THIS TIME !!!
03:46 PM on 01/07/2010
I still believe the US economy & government is a joke that only exists to serve and enrich the already wealthy & well connected.
hat tip to http://iamned-site.blogspot.com/
10:55 AM on 01/07/2010
Sang! The banks aren't lending! We bailed thm out, they gave themselves raises and bonuses, and we still can't get a lone!
08:05 AM on 01/07/2010
Obama's failure as a leader is to blame. He has failed to inspire confidence. Even his own party id deserting him.
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loki
Better to die fighting, than live on knees
12:43 AM on 01/07/2010
wasnt it just a few weeks ago the housing boom was on again. new housing starts were up and housing sales were too?
Glad to see we are over this stupid chasing rainbows day to day, hour to hour and back to watching long term investments. Heck , in this day and age long term would be 24 hours.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Retrofuturistic
see things as they really are
11:44 PM on 01/06/2010
I don't think the housing market will improve at all unless property taxes are lowered.

Where I live, there are many bargains on many wonderful houses, but no one will buy these "bargains" because the property taxes are so high.

Many people can afford to buy the houses--- It's just that they don't want to pay the equivalent of a mortgage payment every month just in taxes.
09:14 PM on 01/06/2010
Housing prices aren't coming back for a long long time. In today's world real estate is simply not as attractive for smart investors as stocks, commodities, etc. Most people don't have hundreds of thousands sitting around to bid up prices. Houses are only worth what the average working person can responsibly afford and banks are not ever going to finance this type of gambling again in our lifetimes.

Securitization was the only way to secure the kind of financing needed to inflate this market but the global investment community is not going to be fooled again.

Look at the good news for those who want to enjoy owning a nice home; they're going to be dirt cheap for a long time. This is great news for all of us except those who are underwater and hoping for a miracle that's not going to happen.

BTW-Obama, the Fed & company know this, success for them isn't inflating the market, it slowing the slide so that the losses are spread out over many years. That way, providing that our economy grows in real terms for main street, the absorption rate of the losses will be acceptable by the banks as they offset those losses by all the trading that most here disapprove of. If the banks had to take the hit in one year we'd need another bailout, larger then the first, and the Tea Baggers would start blowing up federal buildings...
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BocaMom
06:03 PM on 01/06/2010
Thank you Congress for doing nothing to help the economy this past year.
02:45 PM on 01/06/2010
A VERY BIG DIP THAT'S WHY THE GOVERNMENT IS GIVING FANNIE AND FREDDIE ANYTHING THEY WANT WHAT A JOKE THIS ADMINISTRATION IS
VOTE THEM ALL OUT !!!!
02:42 PM on 01/06/2010
The late fall/winter months are historically inactive for home sales. A much better comparison for sales would be end of Q2 or Q3.
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ErnestineBass
No longer a cog in The Machine.
03:41 PM on 01/06/2010
Yep. (my mom is a retired RE broker)
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joebaggadonuts
Civilization: Evolutionary pathway of choice.
01:56 PM on 01/06/2010
I think what we are witnessing is a complete separation of the economy into the haves and those without. There's plenty of forclosure housing stock available for those who need it and have nothing to pay for it with. What we need to do is to get money into their hands so they can afford housing, whether it's currently under water or not. Cramdowns for primary residences would allow householders to afford their housing without taking money from the government other than through the vehicle of the CDO holders/Banksters et al, paying for it. Seems the right way to go. Might even pull the lower classes into a sustainable position.

If what we are after is a crisis of the working classes, we are getting it. They will find a cult leader to start an ugly revolution which will be co-opted by the corporate and wealth interests. I had some hope that the American experiment in democracy would work. I was born into it and supported it all my life. I am losing heart however.
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booki
01:15 PM on 01/06/2010
how much more "dippier' can we get?
face it: the American Dream, has become the American Nightmare.
01:41 PM on 01/06/2010
............................how much more "dippier' can we get?


How about when the first timers ($8,000 tax credit) start to default
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booki
02:16 PM on 01/06/2010
oh............you never learned the definition of the word: "dippier"
sorry.......
actually, i made it up....................for people like you,
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ResearchtheFacts
12:55 PM on 01/06/2010
Do you think the weather and season had something to do with it? Two regions of the country got hit with snow or extremely cold weather. Who house hunts in the snow, unless you absolutely have to move?

And, it is not like any new jobs are being created or the ones outsourced are being in-sourced. What has changed about average American economies that would afford them the ability to buy property?
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drbob601
Soylent Green is People
12:50 PM on 01/06/2010
"When the tax credit expires this spring and the government phases out programs to keep mortgage rates low, the housing market will have to stand on its own. Many economists doubt it can."

Yeah, right...this tax credit will likely be extended (even though our political "leaders" have "promised" that the most recent extension would be the last) because they love giving out money to voters (especially before an election cycle)... and - indirectly - to their "business partners" in the FIRE sector. Our govt will continue to prop up the housing market (keeping prices elevated) because it's fun to hand out "freebies" (and, coincidentally, that's the easiest way to get re-elected). Too bad they're doing all this with BORROWED money.

It's clear that our political process no longer functions properly....and our economic system is certainly not a "free market."
12:38 PM on 01/06/2010
It is the government's job to protect the citizens. Local, County, State, and Federal governments are responsible to insure fair and equitable treatment of its citizens. Laws are passed, regulations are written, and oversight agencies are established with the sole charge of protect the consumer.

hat tip to http://iamned-site.blogspot.com