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Housing Market Picks Up For The Top And Bottom, Not The Middle-Class

Housing Market

First Posted: 04/25/11 09:25 AM ET Updated: 06/25/11 06:12 AM ET

CHICAGO (Nick Carey) - Like an increasing number of well-heeled Americans, the Hodgsons decided it was time to buy a new home, even if most of the U.S. housing market remains in the dumps.

After years in an apartment building, "we were just tired of sharing space with other people," says Cari Hodgson, 32. "It was time to have space of our own."

She and her commodities trader husband sold the condo and recently bought a $1.2 million, five-bedroom home in Chicago's north side, sealing the deal with the kind of big down-payment that is heating up the high-end of the U.S. property market.

Cari, a part-time nurse, declined to say how much of their own money the couple put into the house. But she did say the mortgage was less than a so-called jumbo loan, which are bigger than most U.S. mortgages and currently start at $730,000.

That means the Hodgsons put down at least 40 percent of the house's value, a chunk far out of reach for most Americans.

"We were told by a number of people that it was very difficult to qualify for a jumbo loan," Cari Hodgson said. "So we didn't even try to get one."

Four years after U.S. housing prices began to nose-dive, eventually triggering a global financial crisis, signs of life are appearing at the top and the bottom ends of the market.

By contrast, a sustained recovery remains far off for the vast middle ground of the U.S. housing sector.

Affluent Americans are feeling more secure as the impact of the recession fades and the stock market racks up big gains.

"People who have decent income are saying, maybe I can trade up, buy a better property," said Bill Hardin, director of the real estate program at Florida International University.

"Some people are even saying, I'm willing to take a loss on the property I'm selling now to get something I couldn't buy during the housing peak."

Sales of homes worth over $1 million, which account for about 1.5 percent of total U.S. sales, have risen in most states so far in 2011.

Realtors, brokers and others in the housing industry report the first bidding wars for expensive homes since the crash.

"There is a surge of confidence among high-end buyers and we're unfortunately short on inventory," said Pamela Liebman, chief executive of New York property firm The Corcoran Group.

Her firm saw a doubling in the sale of luxury co-ops, worth more than $10 million, in the first three months of 2011.

At the bottom end, homes are also on the move as investors pay cash for foreclosed properties to rent them out.

It's a different story in the middle of the market.

Properties worth between $100,000 and $500,000 make up more than 60 percent of U.S. housing. Sales in that category in March were down across every region of America from the same month a year earlier, when tax breaks were propping up demand.

Foreclosures and short sales -- whereby struggling homeowners sell their homes for below what they owe, with the consent of their lenders -- are still a big drag. Credit remains tight and middle-income families are more pessimistic than their wealthier compatriots about the economy.

So this year's Spring selling season, when buyers typically start to look for a home after winter, has mostly been a dud.

Access to credit is cited as a broad problem. While the rich can simply put more money down, for most would-be buyers the need for more 'skin in the game' is a deal-breaker.

Realtors and brokers complain that the credit drought is as extreme as the flood of loose lending of the boom years.

"The pendulum has swung from too far to the left to too far to the right," Corcoran's Liebman said. "We need to find some balance in lending."

"IT'S HARD TO BE POSITIVE"

On a recent sunny Sunday afternoon, in Leawood, near Kansas City, realtor Ted DeVore patiently waited inside an elegant ranch home priced at $344,900, eager to point out the lush backyard, new roof, remodeled kitchen and updated bathrooms.

But most of the visitors to the open house were curious neighbors, not would-be buyers.

Middle-income Americans in Middle America are not yet ready to get back into the market. Homes that do sell in the Kansas City area are often going for between 20 percent to 30 percent below the listed price.

"There are so many people questioning things right now, asking themselves, am I going to have my job in six months?" DeVore said, affable but seemingly resigned to a slow Spring. "The indicators are very mixed for the whole economy and the real estate market very closely follows the overall economy."

"It's hard to be positive," he added.

Unemployment of 8.8 percent in March was down from above 10 percent in 2009 but still high enough to worry many Americans.

According to RealtyTrac, which publishes foreclosure statistics, the number of foreclosure filings fell 27 percent in the first quarter from a year earlier but still affected nearly one in every 200 U.S. homes.

And although the National Association of Realtors (NAR) said existing home sales rose 3.7 percent in March, the median home price nationwide was down 5.9 percent from March 2010.

That has few housing market insiders willing to say the worst U.S. housing downturn since the Great Depression has played itself out, despite government support and mortgage interest rates that have scraped record lows.

"It's kind of quiet right now," said Fred Arnold, president of lender American Family Funding. "There's no real excitement out there that we are used to seeing in the springtime."

Many homeowners who are not obliged to move are staying put and investing in home improvements instead.

Home Depot said it has seen rising consumer demand for maintenance and repair projects this spring.

Despite sellers often resorting to painful cuts in their asking prices, realtors say many deals continue to fall through due to the unrealistic expectations on both sides.

"Buyers still think properties are too expensive and want bigger discounts," said Mario Greco, a Chicago-based realtor. "Sellers are still not ready to take their lumps yet and recognize what their property is worth in today's market."

RISK-SHY LENDERS

During the boom, lenders went wild, offering loans with no money down and, in many cases, no requirement on borrowers to prove their income.

Now, access to credit and hefty down-payment requirements are an issue even for buyers with good credit, one that realtors and brokers complain is slowing the market.

"It's difficult, and getting more difficult," said Bob Walters, chief economist at Quicken Loans in Detroit. "All the moves whether it be regulatory, underwriting, pricing -- I can't think of an exception -- all of them are pointing toward making it more challenging to get a loan."

The government-rescued housing finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac tightened up lending standards in 2007 and 2008 as bad loans began to soar and there has been a steady drip of new requirements since then. More changes to credit rules are under discussion and could constrain lending further.

Keith Klein, a mortgage loan consultant at Bank of Blue Valley, a local lender in Overland Park, Kansas, said tougher underwriting standards mean that if prospective buyers cannot put down 20 percent, they cannot get a mortgage.

"We're just not seeing very much right now," he said.

Realtors also complain that credit for first-time buyers has dried up, which has a knock-on effect on the rest of the market as people cannot sell to move up the property ladder.

As the bulk of the market remains hobbled, the contrast with the high end is sharpening.

Mike Sato of Chicago-based Jameson Sotheby's International Realty, cites the recent sale of a $4.5 million home not even built yet as a sign of the change among rich clients.

"I haven't seen a deal like that since 2008," he said.

Diane Saatchi, senior vice-president at Saunders & Associates Realty which specializes in the Hamptons oceanfront strip favored by Wall Street, said she was seeing a lot of buyers paying in cash for homes worth $10 million.

"There's a pent-up demand on the buy side because people have been waiting for a couple years."

High-end borrowers find it easier to get credit but even for them it is not guaranteed.

Matt Farrell, managing partner at Urban Real Estate in Chicago, recounted how a buyer with good credit and seeking a loan for a $2 million home was unable to secure a mortgage in time. So the buyer wired cash to pay for it with no loan.

"After the banking sector was infused with all that government cash to go out and lend more money, you'd think we'd be seeing more activity out there," Farrell said. "But when someone who can pay $2 million in cash can't get a loan, then you know you have a real problem." (Additional reporting by Carey Gillam, Dhanya Skariachan, Kevin Gray, Leah Schnurr, Al Yoon and Daniel Levine)

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

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CHICAGO (Nick Carey) - Like an increasing number of well-heeled Americans, the Hodgsons decided it was time to buy a new home, even if most of the U.S. housing market remains in the dumps. Afte...
CHICAGO (Nick Carey) - Like an increasing number of well-heeled Americans, the Hodgsons decided it was time to buy a new home, even if most of the U.S. housing market remains in the dumps. Afte...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lolie Culley
07:21 PM on 04/26/2011
There will be more Families living on the streets while their homes will be sitting empty.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lolie Culley
07:19 PM on 04/26/2011
New News from Trustees (particularly Trustee Corps), while banks and trustees can't foreclose on some properties without the note of a mortgage, they will now sell houses to themselves just to throw unemployed people out of their homes. Trustees has now been posting this letter into people's home door. I have watched a man doing it in our neighborhood. " If the Trustees is unable to convey title for any reason, the succesful bidder's sole and exclusive remedy shall be return of monies paid to the Trustee and the successful bidder shall have no further recourse." People are loosing everything they have while others are benefitting from others miseries.
03:52 AM on 04/26/2011
You notice that the two ends....expensive homes and cheap homes....are being bought by the upper classes.

The upper classes live in the expensive homes and rent out the cheap homes.

While the middle class home owners can't find buyers.
And potential middle class buyers can't get loans or don't want to buy now because they think prices will go lower.

The greed, selfishness, and risk taking of Banks and Wall Street is destroying much of the middle class.
And our politicians are bought and paid for by the rich.

We have become a nation of, by, and for the rich.
The rest of the people can go to blazes.
12:54 AM on 04/26/2011
Fannie's rule that someone who had a short sale or foreclosure cannot get another mortgage for up to 7 years is a big part of the problem.
10:12 PM on 04/25/2011
Destroy the middle class, and you disable the entire country, turning it into a banana republic. Matt Taibbi said he was shocked to find so much third world style corruption when he returned to US. Remember in 1999 under Clinton we had to eliminate Glass-Steagall Act that separated commercial from investment banking in order to comply with World Trade Organization rules. Combining commercial banks and investment casinos allowed a repeat of 1929 with newer technology. Quote in The Economist from 8 years ago on 1999 WTO meetings: According to George Soros, the significance of the WTO lay in its being the "only global institution to which the United States was willing to subordinate its national laws."
We don't even have the national sovereignty to get ourselves out of this mess, had it in the 1930's, lost it 1999.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dianekkdi
A microbio! How cute! :)
07:14 AM on 04/26/2011
And our pressing reason for complying with the WTO was what? And their reasoning for this stated requirement was what? More info please.
09:35 AM on 04/26/2011
WTO formed 1995 to supervise and liberalize international trade governed by a ministerial conference that meets every 2 years. It's essentially world government of finance and trade. Ironically under FDR during Great Depression US became more isolationist, seeking its own answers. Also under FDR government loans to 20 percent of mortgage holders kept roofs over people's heads By contrast HAMP is a joke. Pecora Commission under Hoover and FDR showed that highly leveraged combination of commercial and investment banking led to crash, so firewall Glass-Steagall was created along with FDIC deposit insurance. FDR got some things right, some things wrong including devaluation of dollar. Obama could take lessons from FDR's attempts, what to do and what doesn't work.
08:53 PM on 04/25/2011
The lower class in many cases, had nothing to loose, and the rich have ample resources to weather any downturn and now buy low. The people who put down big down payments on houses near the top of the bubble are having the hardest fall. And those who engineered the meltdown waltzed away with flush with cash. It worked out brilliantly for the white collar criminals.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
spinotter11
Spinning through life and trying to understand it.
10:14 PM on 04/25/2011
Criminal implies that a crime was committed. No prosecutions.
03:53 AM on 04/26/2011
Not all criminals are "caught" and prosecuted.

But they are still criminals.

Just saying....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Paul Sta
05:19 PM on 04/25/2011
The recovery was never about the middle class, stabilizing the financial sector and the oligopolies that run Govt was, mission accomplished.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
fineartgalaxy
Speaking from the heart, always.
03:10 PM on 04/25/2011
The RE future is bleak. Housing will be owned by those that can afford to pay cash. Banks do not need to lend money to make money.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
fineartgalaxy
Speaking from the heart, always.
03:05 PM on 04/25/2011
A mortgage is a legal loan sharking business. Just do the math and see how much interest you end up paying after so many years. Even with a sizeable downpayment. If you have a mortgage you are always under water in terms of how much money you put in and how much value can you derive after how long. If you can get the mortgage out of the equation then yes, it is a good deal.
03:58 AM on 04/26/2011
The system wasn't bad before the late 1980's.

Even with all the interest, the working and middle classes could usually buy a house and eventually pay it off and have equity in that house.
With a partially paid for house, they could often trade up or move and buy a similar house elsewhere.

Now?
The only way to be sure of equity is to have a paid for house.
Even then, the house may not be worth much.

Today people should buy a home to put down roots, have more space, be able to personalize the house, etc.
Equity is iffy at best.
02:45 PM on 04/25/2011
Banks get bailouts.
The rich get huge tax cuts.
The poor get government help.
The middle class gets nothing.
Why does the middle class continually elect people who help everyone except the middle class?
08:29 PM on 04/25/2011
Because they're misguided enough to watch Fox News and believe what they hear.
10:03 PM on 04/25/2011
Glenn Beck is such a first class nut that he told people "buy gold" when it was under $700 an ounce. Such a nut. Oh, well, he announced a Hindenburg Omen too but the worst that happened was a "flash crash."
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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OcotilloKid
Conservatives work..liberals are the entertainment
01:14 PM on 04/25/2011
As productive people make their way into the middle class, most fleeing democrat controlled big cities for more economic opportunity found in red state cities, the effects of liberal policies over several decades are laid bare. What is left (excuse the pun), are inner cities festered with crime, violence, poverty and a generational sense of hopelessness and government dependence. What is perfectly obvious to any rational person is that liberalism and the social welfare state are unmitigated disasters that have destroyed the very communities that they were purported to help. From the inner city public school system to the massive poverty stricken communities that support Obamunism without question, liberalism has left in its wake pustules of destruction everywhere you look.....you only need open your eyes.
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stape45
Spin this!
01:21 PM on 04/25/2011
What is right (pardon the pun) is opportuniy throughout the nation - not just in certain isolated, low-paying areas that only look good when compared to something that was made bad.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
fineartgalaxy
Speaking from the heart, always.
02:49 PM on 04/25/2011
Liberal policies over several decades? I guess Bush de-regulations had nothing to do with the economy, correct? Bushomunism?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CARLITO101
01:10 PM on 04/25/2011
Chaotician. You arer barely partly right. Do a search on the Community Reinvestment act. Clinton revived it in 1999 which allowed Low Income Institutions and individuals to purchase homes with 3 % down. Even then it wasnt a problem because only a small percentage of the mortgages were guaranteed by the FHA. Some Lenders even refused to approve the small percentage guaranteed by the FHA. The Government forced them to approve those mortgages by threatening them with the "Fair Lending Act". Did you also forget the Boycotts by Jesse?.On January 3, 2007, the Democrats took control of both Houses of Congress and increased the Guaranteed percentage to over 70% of the Mortgages. Then some. Lenders and Wall Street did go wild. Why not? A person working at Burger King making 15 K a year could now buy a $200,000 home guaranteed by the Taxpayer.Some even bought several with no money down and tried to flip them etc. Of course Greenspan made the Loans even more enticing by lowering Fed Rates to 1% and Bernanke cut Credit off by increasing rates 14 consecutive times causing rates to go up and increase mortgage payments by 80-100% for those who bought variable rate mortages because they were cheaper up front.Because the the abnormal increases in Housing prices many previous buyers were using the Equity in their Homes as Piggy Banks until the bubble collapsed. Do a search on the "Tulip Mania Craze" and the South Sea Bubble".
01:37 PM on 04/25/2011
Yep.
08:37 PM on 04/25/2011
Watch "Inside Job" for how the banks went wild on subprime mortgages for one reason - to profit from unsophisticated low-income borrowers - not because Democrats forced them to participate in that business. It's called pedatory lending.
09:14 PM on 04/25/2011
and predatory servicing of the loans
04:03 AM on 04/26/2011
The Dems didn't force anybody to do anything.

The Banks and Wall Street were more than willing to do what they did.
Willing AND eager!

And they went beyond anything the Dems could have ever imagined concerning sub-prime mortgages......or even regular mortgages for that matter.
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yakmeat
My bank account is emptier than my micro-bio.
12:58 PM on 04/25/2011
Note that the wealthy are not only buying at the upper end of the market, but they are also soaking up the lower end of the market, buying "investment" properties to rent out to the rest of us poor slobs.
12:53 PM on 04/25/2011
The middle class is being changed into a servants class...and as servants are not allowed to own property....
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prettyinpink
Liberalism-Ideas so good-they're MANDATORY
03:01 PM on 04/25/2011
....without 20% down and a job.
04:07 AM on 04/26/2011
Until the last 10-15 years or so, 20% down and a job were REQUIREMENTS for a home mortgage.
There were a few special cases, mostly for veterans.
That was under Dem and Repug presidents and Congresses.

The system worked.

We did not have anything near another recession UNTIL the politicians started deregulating Wall Street and the banks.
12:51 PM on 04/25/2011
""we were just tired of sharing space with other people," says Cari Hodgson"

Anti-social weirdos.