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America's 10 Sickest Housing Markets: 24/7 Wall St.

24/7 Wall St.     First Posted: 08/03/11 02:21 PM ET   Updated: 10/03/11 06:12 AM ET

From 24/7 Wall St.: For three years, the real estate market has been going in one direction — primarily down. Some areas, however, have begun to recover. Recent S&P/Case-Shiller data show that among the top 20 housing markets in the U.S., 18 had very modest improvements in sales prices during May. Others, like Washington and Boston, have began to at least stabilize from a year ago.

Few markets, however, can match Washington and Boston. Robert Shiller has been stating that home prices could fall another 10% in the next year. Inventories in some major metropolitan areas would take years of sales to get back to 2005 levels. Then, the normal inventory of homes for sale was replaced on average every six months and it was unusual for a house to be on the market for a year. Foreclosure rates remain high and only the robo-signing scandal has slowed the process.

Once this is resolved, economists fear the market will be flooded with even more vacant, unsold homes.24/7 Wall St. has taken a new look at the housing market to find the very weakest cities by identifying those with the highest homeowner vacancy rates and rental vacancy rates. These are markets where demand has clearly collapsed. These are cities where the requirement for living space has dropped well below the national average.

Further, vacancy rates of many cities were stable during the recession, but accelerated sharply higher in the last year. Similarly, housing prices in several of these markets have decreased at a faster rate in the last three quarters than during the recession. These cities, like Detroit, St. Louis, Dayton, and Atlanta, also tend to be larger and older among the top 75 metropolitan areas. Their economies were damaged long before the recession.

Methodology: 24/7 Wall St. pulled Census data on the 75 largest U.S. metropolitan areas and ranked the cities with the highest overall vacancy rates for both homeowner vacancy and rental vacancy for the second quarter of 2011. We picked the cities with the worst rates in each of the two categories to create meta-data ranks. We then removed the cities that had either improved homeowner vacancy rate in either the last twelve months or the last quarter. We believed that any sign of improvement in homeowner vacancies, the more telling of the vacancy rates, should disqualify a city. To improve our analysis, we also looked at unemployment rates for these cities provided by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. We also used historical median home prices, as provided by the National Association of Realtors.

Read more at 24/7 Wall St.

These are America’s ten sickest housing markets.

10. Oklahoma City, OK
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> Homeowner vacancy rates: 5.2% (6th)
> Rental vacancy rates: 9.6% (34th)
> Total housing units: 539,077
> Unemployment: 4.9%

Oklahoma City had the sixth highest homeowner vacancy rate in the country as of the second quarter of this year. The city's unemployment rate is just 5.3%, but this low rate has not helped improve high home and rental vacancy. From last year, home sales in Oklahoma state dropped by 7.7%, according to the state's newspaper NewsOK. In the city, sales were flat from last year. Between the first quarter of 2010 and the first quarter of 2011, the median home price in the city dropped by more than 8%.

Read more at 24/7 Wall St.
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From 24/7 Wall St.: For three years, the real estate market has been going in one direction — primarily down. Some areas, however, have begun to recover. Recent S&P/Case-Shiller data show that among...
From 24/7 Wall St.: For three years, the real estate market has been going in one direction — primarily down. Some areas, however, have begun to recover. Recent S&P/Case-Shiller data show that among...
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01:29 AM on 09/04/2011
Just about everyone has to take some blame for what's happening in this economy. From the politicians over spending to the wall street financial institutions making risking loans and investments. And guess what you can blame that greedy individual home owner who continued to borrow more money on home equity every few years. Now all that greed has everyone paying the price.
11:46 AM on 08/30/2011
It does not take an advanced mind to see where we are now but, if you are under 45 years of age you do not remember the FHA 235 and 245 plans that took out the Savings and Loan Industry in the 1980's. Our housing bubble is no less than the result of government intrusion in the free market system and they messed it up...AGAIN. as usual.

The issues we face here today are simple... FAILED energy policies that go back to Jimmy Carter and everyone and every party since. Building nuclear plants were brought to a stop by "protesters" who knew it all. Now they live in the shadows of the towers they demanded be stopped and evryone else has suffered from the lack of energy those plants could have produced. HMMMM...lets see do you think you could build them today for what it would have cost in 1978?

To not drill for oil in any place in America ( Everglades, Rockies,Alaska ) is very simplistic way of thinking and not within the grasp of reality. I am sorry that my Grandchildren will NEVER know the greatness of America because of special interest groups tha place their "ideals" in front of our reality.

NAFTA was a bad idea back with with Bill Clinton and anyone with brains can see the result.

FAILED leadership has been the way of America since Eisenhower without exception and we will continue to pay the price for our whole lives.
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Godfearing
Get Ready For NRA Takeover!
12:55 PM on 08/15/2011
With so many people praying to God to solve all the various problems, don't wait for a solution soon.

He is fretting about just feeding the 7 billion hungry people in the world.
hatenomor
DO FOR SELF. BLACK SELF DETERMINATION
01:18 PM on 08/15/2011
GOD helps those who help themselves, or so I've been told.
Tell me, this feeding the world thing. Does that enclude using pesticides? You do know that the banning of certain pesticides by countries have made it next to impossible increase the crop yield in parts of Africa, do you not? It is a major issue in some African mations who want to use pesticides, and are being opposed by certain enviromental groups. You should google it.
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William Graham
Librarian, botanist, and programmer
02:19 PM on 08/08/2011
Predators - Cooperators - Parasites

The rich - the getting-bys - the poor
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Jim bob
Be the change you wish to see.
03:03 PM on 08/09/2011
You're all heart, william graham. Black heart, but I suppose that's better than none at all.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
columbusbuck
LGBT/Veteran
12:03 PM on 08/07/2011
Look at Tuscon. It sits in a desert. Why would anyone want to live in a desert? The city is one EMP away from being Somalia.
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opine Ron
I am not nonpartisan; I am anti-partisan.
05:06 PM on 08/08/2011
Amen! I live in Tucson and I despise being stuck in this hellhole.
01:34 AM on 09/05/2011
Why not leave? Why are you still there?
11:17 PM on 08/06/2011
this all along was the republicans plan for afforable housing
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GoogleAlphaPublishing
nothing, nobody, not a representative
06:05 PM on 08/05/2011
I think the problem is a predator and prey situation. Too much over aggressiveness at "the top" and too much self-victimization at the bottom. There is still a solid middle group in America that mostly manages to avoid the whole mess. We're not the ones making the news. Having visited a number of cities on the list, one gets the impression of many lives (intentionally) wasted. My question is if home and rental vacancies are high in these cities, where's everyone going? Maybe moving in with relatives?
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08:13 AM on 08/05/2011
I am a resident who grew up in Dayton, a powerhouse in its day. Inventors ,industrialist genius abound. those days left with manufacturing decline, mexico and china cheap labor. world headquarter of and manufacturing home of N.C.R. in 70's founded by Mr.Patterson, heart of General Motors with Delco labs started by Charles Kettering past Chairman of G.M.
Dayton will come back with high tech jobs by partnership with Wright Paterson Air Force Base, University of Dayton, A revitalizing of abandoned G.M. building into Tech town downtown. A minor league baseball team affiliate of the Cincinnatti Reds is setting attendence records for sold out games, thanks to MAGIC JOHNSON BEING PART OWNER. I was lucky to have grown up in this great town and the chance to work at some of this great employers but things are real tough now ,but things will get better. Manufacturing in the U.S. must be top of the list. Buy american made products even if it cost a few cents more ,or do not wonder why you are unemployed.
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USA2Sense
02:15 AM on 08/05/2011
THANK YOU - CONGRESS!!!
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CePe
A moderate too liberal for Texas
07:53 PM on 08/04/2011
If it weren't in Arizona, I'd move to Tucson and buy a house - too bad Arizona is a sister backwater state to Texas - might as well stay at home! Sigh!
05:36 PM on 08/04/2011
Wow, since Huffington Post invaded aol the opinions sure have become a sounding board for frustrated liberals. I can't believe you still want to hang all of this on Bush. Where's the "change" Obama promised? Looks to me like everything is a change for the worse. We're worse off now than when Bush was President.
So if you say that Bush started this and he's responsible, then you're admitting that Obama is incapable of a sound corrective plan. I concur. He had two years to turn things around with complete party control of all branches of government. No improvement....zero,zilch.
The real problem is that a government that grows faster than the private sector, unions that demand wages that are not globally competitive, and social programs that reward those that don't work when they could, are the core principals of Mr. Obama and his supporters and a recipe for economic stagnation and failed capitalism.
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suebeedue
06:36 PM on 08/05/2011
well---- Bush sure didn't help. the fake war after 9/11 was beginning of end-- obama came in and cannot do a darn thing about it-- this is not a democratic, republican thing---- NO ONE can get the country or the world out of all the messes it is in except God himself---and it looks like he will have to do something very soon!! mankind cannot agree on ANYTHING, EVERYONE plays the blame game and meanwhile it all goes downhill!!
06:54 AM on 08/06/2011
OH, Libya, It is Bush's fault.
11:59 AM on 08/30/2011
GOD can not save us from ourselves. But, let each of spend $45 on sometning other than our gas tank each week and we will see thing headed in the right direction. who ever is president then will be a hero. left or right...why can't we all see the obvious. the price of energy makes everything cost more so we all have less we can buy. High energy cost us more to run Washington, more to add to a deficet, less jobs, less spending at the store, less tax revenue to Washington. If we get a spike in interest we will all think oil was a small problem...DRILL EVERYWHERE!!!
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Alex Oconnor
09:12 PM on 08/08/2011
Hmm...seems to me that hemorrhaging 700,000+ jobs per month in 4th quarter 2008 and early 2009 is a hell of a lot worse that actual positive job creation. But then again that would take believing in evidence , history, and math. None of which are prevalent on the right
10:42 AM on 08/09/2011
Hi Alex,
I appreciate your point. The most recent statistics don't indicate any positive job growth. In fact it shows the hemorraging continues. Believe me, I don't get satisfaction from the continued loss of jobs in our country. My point was simply that Obama ran on a platform that indicated change was necessary and he had the solution. Unfortunately, like all politicians, Republican or Democrat, it's the same rhetoric they use to push our buttons to get elected. Fact is, he doesn't have a solution because no one seeking election will tell the truth.
We need corporations to discontinue moving jobs overseas simply because tax rates are lower and loopholes exist. Unions need to accept the stark truth that our wage scales and entitlements don't allow us to be globally competitive.
There aren't many things that we import that couldn't be made in America. But if the workers won't accept a competitive wage and the companies are taxed above the rates they can get elsewhere, no President, Congress, or government will be able to correct the problem. We, the people, need to do it by accurate assesments of the competition we face and formulation of a strategy that we demand our government undertake. They simply are inefficient due to politics.
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exflatlander
05:08 PM on 08/09/2011
Republicans and their trolls here don't believe in facts. They are often to complicated for their simple minds. Fanned.
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DoctorWhoDat
Are You sitting comfortably?
04:16 PM on 08/04/2011
It's seems the Bush trickle down theory is working like it was suppose to.
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jg401
Reagansux
04:15 PM on 08/04/2011
Thank you republican party for all the damage you've done to America.
04:04 PM on 08/04/2011
It is sad to have to live through this part of our nation's history. I'm pretty sure we can do better.
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exflatlander
03:32 PM on 08/04/2011
Let's see. Red states have the highest poverty levels for adults and children, the worst education systems, some of the highest unemployment, and now the worst housing markets.

How's that Tea Party working out for you folks?
sandiegoconservative
Surprisingly refreshing and undeniably delightful
08:05 PM on 08/04/2011
Ill give you a homework assignment since you are about the 1000th person to make this type of comment.

Take a look at the specific cities mentioned in this article. Of those in the Red State category, what is the population comprised of, and what is their voting preference? And not just actual voters, but all potential voters.

Ill give you a hint, and will use Mississippi, perhaps the poorest State in the nation. When I researched the issue, 15 out of the 15 poorest counties had majority populations of minorities and all but I believe one tended to vote Democratic ticket (out of eligible voters). There were a few that considered them self "staunch" Democratic party supporters. And let's face it, who do minorities tend to vote for?

How do some of these areas have Republican leaders? For the same reason why people are clamoring about voter ID and "restrictions" on voting, the poor and minorities do not vote as often as they could and should.

That's not to say these are the sole issues, but before you make blanket statements, perhaps there is more to the story to be discovered.
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Jim bob
Be the change you wish to see.
03:07 PM on 08/09/2011
I think you're avoiding the subject.
10:37 PM on 08/08/2011
I dont feel sorry for anyone losing a home with a no money down loan ,they have nothing into it.One has to rent somewhere.Thanks to all the [everybody should have a house]entitalist losers.
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Jim bob
Be the change you wish to see.
03:08 PM on 08/09/2011
I think it was George W. Bush that coined, or parroted after his staff coined, the phrase "ownership society". I suppose you'll say I'm wrong, but I'm not. Thank you, loser.