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Case-Shiller Index: Home Prices Jump In 17 Cities In June, But Housing Outlook Is Grim

ALAN ZIBEL   08/31/10 10:51 AM ET   AP

Home Prices Rise

WASHINGTON — Home prices rose in June for a third straight month as now-expired tax credits inspired a burst of home-buying. But prices are expected to fall through the rest of the year now that demand has faded.

The Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller 20-city home price index released Tuesday posted a 1 percent increase in June from May and was up 4.2 percent from a year ago.

Seventeen cities showed monthly price gains. Still, the gains were weaker from the previous month in several markets, including San Francisco, San Diego and Los Angeles.

Home prices nationally were up 4.4 percent in the April-to-June quarter. That followed a decline of 2.8 percent in the January-to-March quarter. The jump was largely because buyers could take advantage of government tax credits of up to $8,000.

Home sales have dropped sharply since those incentives expired. Lending standards remain tight, unemployment is stuck near double digits and foreclosures are expected to remain at extraordinary levels.

"We do not take this report as a signal of future strength," wrote BNP Paribas economist Yelena Shulyatyeva. She expects the Case-Shiller report to show price declines by August. Economists at IHS Global Insight project home prices will fall by up to 8 percent and hit the bottom sometime next year.

The biggest monthly increases in June were in Chicago, Detroit and Minneapolis. Prices rose 2.5 percent in each of those cities. Prices in Seattle and Phoenix were flat. Home prices in Las Vegas fell 0.6 percent.

Nationally, prices have risen 6 percent from their April 2009 bottom. But they remain 28 percent below their July 2006 peak.

Prices are widely expected to fall in the second half of the year. Sales of previously occupied homes plunged in July to the lowest level in 15 years, despite the lowest mortgage rates in decades and bargain prices in many areas.

The inventory of unsold homes on the market has grown. At the current sales pace, it would take more than a year to exhaust the inventory on the market nationwide, compared with a healthy level of about six months.

When unsold homes sit on the market, sellers are forced to lower their asking prices. And homeowners looking to trade up may be forced to back out of purchases because they can't sell their homes.

Pam Geller and her husband have been trying to sell their two-bedroom condominium in Los Angeles so they can buy a house. It remains unsold after more than two months on the market, even after the couple lowered the price to $359,000 from $399,000.

They're close to completing the purchase of their next home. But the deal will collapse unless they find a buyer in two weeks. Geller said she's unwilling to slash the price further.

With home prices likely to fall, Geller wonders if it might be better to wait to buy another home. "What I see is houses still dropping" in value, she said.

__

AP Real Estate Writer Alex Veiga contributed to this report from Los Angeles.

(This version CORRECTS Corrects quarterly increase to 4.4 percent. )

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WASHINGTON — Home prices rose in June for a third straight month as now-expired tax credits inspired a burst of home-buying. But prices are expected to fall through the rest of the year now that...
WASHINGTON — Home prices rose in June for a third straight month as now-expired tax credits inspired a burst of home-buying. But prices are expected to fall through the rest of the year now that...
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03:46 PM on 09/04/2010
Do you think we can get someone somewhere to write about the NEWSWORTHY strong real estate markets in the country right now? Like metropolitan Washington and Dallas?

Perhaps an examination of what makes them perform relatively well would be helpful.
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03:45 PM on 09/04/2010
Washington home values up 7.3% in June
by Tucker Echols
Washington Business Journal
August 31, 2010

http://washington.bizjournals.com/washington/stories/2010/08/30/daily13.html?s=industry&i=resi_real_estate

Local Washington-area home prices continue to improve at a faster pace than most of the nation, rising 7.3% from June 2009 to June 2010. Well above the average national increase of 4.3 percent for the 20 markets surveyed in the S&P/Case Shiller Home Price Index. Washington had the fifth-best year-over-year gain in the latest survey.


Home prices rise, foreclosure sales drop in D.C. area
by Joey Flechas
Washington Examiner
August 6, 2010

http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/local/Home-prices-rise_-foreclosure-sales-drop-in-D_C_-area-1007682-100067259.html

Local Washington-area home prices rose about 10.5 percent in July over the previous year, according to a report released Thursday by real estate analytics company Clear Capital.
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03:45 PM on 09/04/2010
DC & MD closing costs well below national average
by Jeff Clabaugh
Washington Business Journal
August 16, 2010

http://washington.bizjournals.com/washington/stories/2010/08/16/daily9.html?s=industry&i=resi_real_estate

Closing costs nationally, including loan origination and title fees, average $3,741 on a $200,000 mortgage. Locally Maryland ranked No. 38 at $3,402; DC ranked No. 22 at $3,685. Virginia was No. 19, with average closing costs of $3,883. New York had the highest closing costs, at $5,623. Arkansas had the lowest, at $3,007.


Greater Washington tops US, worldwide lists in business and employment
by Sarah Crouse
Washington Business Journal
June 11, 2010

http://washington.bizjournals.com/washington/blog/2010/06/greater_wa­shington_a­rea_tops_u­s_worldwid­e_lists_in­_business_­and_employ­ment.html

Greater Washington ranks second among U.S. metropolitan areas for job growth from 2000 through 2009, adding 271,800 jobs, according to the 2010 Greater Washington Regional Report released June 10th by the Greater Washington Initiative.
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03:45 PM on 09/04/2010
Metropolitan Area Employment and Unemployment Summary
Bureau of Labor Statistics
For release 10:00 a.m. (EDT) Wednesday, September 1, 2010

http://www.bls.gov/news.release/metro.nr0.htm

Compared to the national jobless rate of 9.7% the DC metro area records the largest employment increase this year: +41,800, the lowest jobless rate: 6.4%. Bethesda-Rockville-Frederick reported the lowest unemployment rate among suburban areas: 5.8%.
04:17 PM on 09/03/2010
This report doesnt really mean anything. Refinance applications are still denied by banks.
http://www.newsbeats.net/showthread.php?5048-U.S.-Foreclosures-continue
Home owners who cant refi are left with no options but be forced to foreclose
03:04 AM on 09/02/2010
The housing market is so so but we are hoping for the best! So we think few more years till the market gets it's energy again...

by: http://www.insiderater.com
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12:00 AM on 09/01/2010
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-08-31/karl-case-sees-a-lot-of-positive-stuff-in-housing-price-data-tom-keene.html

"The housing market is “not quite stabilized yet, but it looks like it’s beginning to,” Case said in the interview. “So I’d say another couple of years before you can really declare victory.”

The Case-Shiller index is a moving three-month average, which means the June data are still being influenced by transactions in April and May that benefited from the government incentive. A pullback in demand since the credit ended, mounting foreclosures and an unemployment rate near a 26-year high may weigh on prices in coming months."
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"may weigh on prices in coming months"?

More like it's going to weigh in on prices. The average house price is still too expensive for the average consumer. Additionally, the mortgage resets don't peak until next year, and shadow inventory along with notice of defaults are still rising.
03:13 PM on 08/31/2010
How many Americans have the economic confidence to sign their John Henry on a 15 or 30-year mortgage contract in this contemporary depression??? There are no quick fixes for this perfect economic storm developed over many decades of well-constructed financial and corporate engineering. American wealth distribution illustrates the magnificence of the economic engineering approaching nearly a century.

“Home sales have dropped sharply since those incentives expired. The jump was largely because buyers could take advantage of government tax credits of up to $8,000.
Lending standards remain tight, unemployment is stuck near double digits and foreclosures are expected to remain at extraordinary levels.” So much for the wonders of statistical magic, economic reality brings us into economic focus quickly.
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Joseph Joyal
retired bum
03:08 PM on 08/31/2010
Without jobs people won't be buying houses. The housing industry relies on other industry to supply buyers, unlike cars your house will last for longer that the loan.
Without jobs in manufacturing like the auto industry we are not going to see any real change in the economy.
We are doomed to become a third world nation if we do not get our jobs back. and houses will sit unoccupied until they fall down.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
USNDC
Smartest President ever ? ... not even close.
01:22 PM on 08/31/2010
Inventory is increasing.

Foreclosures are growing.

The real estate market is poised drop even further ... and quickly.

The unresolved foreclosure crisis continues to threaten us all.

Obama is in political hiding.
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karen1p
12:58 PM on 08/31/2010
Continued from below, Part TWO

Trap 6: Ignoring the foreclosure complaint.

Truth: Big Mistake! Result: You lose your home.



Trap 7: Thinking Bankruptcy will solve the foreclosure.

Truth: Bankruptcy may be an option but in most cases it only stalls the foreclosure. You need to seek an attorney who will explain the difference as well as your options.



Trap8: Mortgage Defense Attorneys are expensive.

Truth: Not True! It’s more cost effective and adventitious to defend the foreclosure than to seek a Loan Modification or walk away. Fighting is the ONLY way you will win. And you CAN win!



Trap 9: There are no defenses against foreclosure.

Truth: NOT True! Foreclosure defenses are available because of the securitization of the Notes to Trusts, who sold unregulated securities to investors for three times the value of your Note. Like any Ponzi Scheme, it has holes.



YOU CAN WIN !!!!




Disclaimer: I am not an attorney and this information should not be seen as legal advice.
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karen1p
12:58 PM on 08/31/2010
Trap 1: Not hiring a mortgage defense attorney who believes in winning.

Truth: You will lose your home.



Trap 2: Trusting the bank is delaying your foreclosure lawsuit while “considering” your loan modification application.

Truth: That’s a LIE. The Bank’s game is to keep you from defending the foreclosure until the Court orders your house sold and you lose your home.



Trap 3: Paying a Loan Modification Company or Loan Modification Attorney for a loan modification. THERE ARE NO loan modifications.

Truth: The Home Affordable Mortgage Program (HAMP) is not guaranteed loan modification; it’s free, if your lender is participating; and, if you agree to a HAMP loan modification, you become worse off than a renter. The truth is, loan modification is not available because the Banks DO NOT own your Note. The Note was sold to a Trust, whose investors often won’t agree to a loan modification.



Trap4: Trusting the Loan Modification Company or Loan Modification Attorney handling your foreclosure suit.

Truth: No one is DEFENDING your foreclosure suit. Result: You lose your home.



Trap 5: Signing an answer handed to you by a non-attorney or Loan Modification Attorney as a “Pro Se” defendant.

Truth: “Pro Se” means you are representing yourself and you may be admitting to something you do not want to admit. Result: you lose your home.


Disclaimer: I am not an attorney, this should not be seen as legal advice

Part ONE, to be continued.
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DebtNavigation
Attorney and Author
12:53 PM on 08/31/2010
Case-Schiller is a lagging indicator. And the second-quarter bounce was undoubtedly the incentives and the little bit of momentum that continued on after their expiration. Americans are in the debt dumper, by and large. They will need to stand up against the banks to get out.

In Mexico in the mid-'90s Wall Street engineered a currency coup that tripled the debt owed by small businesses and family farms and also allowed for them to be massively ratejacked on top of it. Mexicans consequently formed the "el Barzon" movement and pushed back Wall Street and deposed their ruling party of 60+ years. In this country YouTube phenom Ann Minch has already declared the debtors' revolt and begun going after them http://www.revoltstartsnow.com

If you've been pushed under, you can read every other page of my book for free: http://www.scribd.com/doc/25443175/Debt-Hope-Down-and-Dirty-Survival-Strategies-Evaluation-Version-Complete
11:57 AM on 08/31/2010
A factor believed to contribute to financial crisis is the role of investment mistakes caused by imperfection in reasoning and human behaviour. False home prices index can set false expectations that appear real and can misdirect consumer mood and behaviour.

The Wall Street Challenger questions the accuracy of the S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Indices pointing out that the indices weights down or eliminates data points that are market driven.

The Case-Shiller Home Price Indices methodology and its assumptions limit the system in measuring the performance of house price movement. The Case-Shiller Home Price Indices are more designed to measure the growth in value of residential real estate where the market should be rather than where the market actually is.

See article that appeared in http://thewallstreetchallenger.com/Index/Case-Shiller_HPI.htm
11:53 AM on 08/31/2010
"The inventory of unsold homes on the market has grown. At the current sales pace, it would take more than a year to exhaust the inventory on the market nationwide, compared with a healthy level of about six months."

I would argue that this inventory is representative of what really is for sale. So I am saying that banks have purposely sat on inventory they own not wanting to depress the market even more by pushing those homes out into the market. Equally I know that many people would like to sell what they have, but know this is not the market to have any success. My point is that many are just staying put if they can waiting until there is at least a market not so skewed towards the buyer.
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12:03 AM on 09/01/2010
"So I am saying that banks have purposely sat on inventory they own not wanting to depress the market even more by pushing those homes out into the market'...

That would be whats known as shadow inventory. Its been going on since early 2008.