Is The Housing Market In Recovery?
Is The Housing Market In Recovery? I hope you find this information helpful. Contact me for all your South Florida real estate needs at (305) 329-4929 or [email protected].
Is The Housing Market In Recovery? I hope you find this information helpful. Contact me for all your South Florida real estate needs at (305) 329-4929 or [email protected].
Downtown Miami 2020 Video illustration of ten billion dollar boom coming to Downtown Miami by the year 2020. Please contact me for all your South Florida real estate needs at (305) 329-4929 or [email protected].
Real Estate Bidding Wars Are Back Pending-home sales in March hit their highest level since April 2010, spurring the return of real-estate bidding wars. Nick Timiraos reports on The News Hub. Please contact me for all your South Florida real
Ellen Degeneres Talks Real Estate I hope you got a good laugh, like I did.
City of Aventura 2010 Census Open publication – Free publishing – More 2010 Please contact me for all your Aventura real estate needs at (305) 329-4929 or [email protected].
Ready To Buy A Home? There are good opportunities in the real estate market. How do you know if you’re ready to buy a home? Important things to know before you go house hunting: Make sure your credit is in
South Florida Residential Inventory Compiled by Condo Vultures Realty using the South Florida Shared Multiple Listing Service. Active listings are properties where no current sale contract exists; pending sales are properties in which a contract for sale has been executed,
Survey Shows Consumer Attitudes More Positive A new survey shows that Americans’ concerns about key economic and housing issues are beginning to subside. Fannie Mae’s February 2012 National Housing Survey shows that consumer attitudes have stabilized across most indicators—including personal
Foreclosures Trending Downward New figures show that foreclosures are down nationwide. There were 830,000 foreclosures completed in 2011 compared to 1.1 million in 2010. Florida had the most homes in the foreclosure process, almost 12% of all mortgaged homes. I
Housing Outlook Continues to Brighten, Say Economists
Housing Outlook Continues to Brighten, Say Economists
Mirroring the uneven economic recovery, the housing market is expected to move in a slow, gradual upward path in 2012, while encountering its share of speed bumps along the road, according to economists participating in yesterday’s National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) construction forecast webinar on the housing and economic outlook.
While the latest monthly housing data have shown signs of a slight softening, NAHB Chief Economist David Crowe said this is more reflective of typical month-to-month volatility in the numbers and unusual seasonal factors than they are an indication of any significant downward trend in the broader housing market.
“The aggregate information suggests we’re just in a pause mode right now in terms of these measures,” said Crowe, who noted this could partly be the result of an early spring that brought much better weather than usual into the picture at the start of this year and pulled some housing activity forward.
Pointing out that less volatile quarterly data have continued to show modest improvement in key housing indicators such as builder sentiment, new-home sales and housing production, Crowe said the “housing outlook continues to slowly brighten.”
Crowe noted that numerous other fundamentals remain positive for housing at this time, including demographic factors (with pent-up household demand expected to ramp up and echo-boomers heading into their prime household formation ages), historically favorable mortgage rates that are not expected to move higher than 5 percent by the end of next year, more than 100 local markets currently listed on the NAHB/First American Improving Markets Index, and the fact that house price-to-income ratio has now returned to its historical average of about three-to-one versus the nearly five-to-one to which it had previously risen during the height of the housing boom.
However, he cautioned that housing still continues to face formidable challenges of its own such as rising foreclosures, persistently tight lending standards for homebuyers and builders and difficulties in obtaining accurate appraisals. Moreover, disappointing job growth numbers in March and uncertainty in the European economy are undermining prospects for a vigorous recovery.
“No one is anticipating that an upward path for housing will run in a straight-line trajectory,” said Crowe. “The economy is in an uneven recovery and
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