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  1. #11
    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    10 US Housing Markets At Risk Of A Major Collapse

    #1 Miami-Dade, Fla.




    Image: Wikipedia

    Active loans: 366,775

    90+ days delinquent loans: 26,735

    Foreclosed homes kept off the market: 64,708

    Distressed total: 24.9%

    Source: CoreLogic via Minyanville
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  2. #12
    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    Five years from U.S. housing peak, still no bottom


    Apr 15, 2011 15:12 EDT
    By Martin Hutchinson

    The author is a Reuters Breakingviews columnist. The opinions expressed are his own.

    WASHINGTON — Five years on from their peak, there’s still no bottom in sight for America’s house prices. After rising from a trough in 2009, prices are falling again and market activity is very thin. It’s another complexity for monetary policymakers with an eye on inflation: hiking interest rates could further squash housing.

    The housing bubble that inflated in the run-up to 2006 owed much to the Federal Reserve’s policy. During and after the 2001 recession, the Fed under Chairman Alan Greenspan held interest rates very low, and well below inflation. That coincided with a political environment and tax benefits — like the mortgage interest deduction — that encouraged home ownership, and was capped by financial technology that allowed mortgages to be repackaged and resold so that the original lenders retained no risk.

    Yet thanks to low interest rates, the National Association of Realtors’ affordability index remained above its long-term average even as the ratio of the typical house price to income soared to unprecedented levels above five times, compared with a long-term average around three times.

    Helped by a dose of bubble-induced fraud that stretched some mortgage borrowers even further, lower-quality subprime borrowers began getting into difficulty even as house prices were peaking. That was the beginning of the collapse that eventually swept through the mortgage securitization market and put the banking system in difficulty, causing a financial crunch and a sharp economic downturn.

    The average house price tumbled 32 percent in the three years after the 2006 peak, by the seasonally adjusted S&P/Case-Shiller 20-city index. Initially, prices then rebounded remarkably quickly, turning up in June 2009 — around the time the recession bottomed and well before the peak in unemployment — and climbing 5 percent in the following 12 months.

    But that turns out to have been a false dawn. Even cheaper money, extra tax incentives and higher loan limits at the now government-owned Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and at the Federal Housing Administration helped produce the rebound, but it fizzled out in the months after the tax breaks were withdrawn in April 2010.

    A renewed house price decline has set in, with the January reading of the Case-Shiller index 4 percent down from its mini-peak seven months earlier — although the index remains just above the post-crisis trough level.

    Meanwhile, U.S. new home sales in February fell 28 percent from the previous year to a record low pace. The inventory of new homes rose to 8.9 months’ sales, although this is an improvement on the 12 months’ worth of stock two years ago. Existing home sales also declined slightly in February from a year earlier.

    U.S. employment trends have turned positive in recent months, which will help prices. So will mild inflation, which increases housing affordability. But there are factors that point to a significant further decline. First, interest rates remain artificially low, and with inflation beginning to accelerate, they are declining in real terms. This has brought the NAR’s affordability index to an all-time peak of 192.3 in February. That suggests even the current level of house prices may be flattered by low mortgage costs.

    Second, the already high level of reported housing inventories may not tell the whole story. Homes going through the foreclosure process and those that cannot currently be sold because the owners are underwater on their mortgages represent an additional, invisible overhang.

    Looked at against history, American house prices are still well over 30 percent above the cyclical low in September 1993 in real terms, adjusting the long-running Case-Shiller 10-city index for inflation. On a more thorough analysis, economist Gary Shilling believes house prices have a further 20 percent to fall. That may be too pessimistic, but prices surely face headwinds from the foreclosure pipeline and high levels of inventories.

    And that’s the difficulty for the Fed. With house prices in January down 31 percent from their peak by the Case-Shiller 20-city index and declining again, more loans that appeared perfectly sound when written are dipping under water. Yet with Friday’s release showing consumer prices rose 0.5 percent in March, the same increase as in February, it looks as if inflationary pressures are slowly building. That means policymakers may soon have to consider raising interest rates, which will force mortgage costs higher and knock housing prices down further. Five years on, U.S. homeowners don’t yet have much cause for optimism.

    http://blogs.reuters.com/columns/2011/0 ... no-bottom/
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  3. #13
    Senior Member uniteasone's Avatar
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    I have heard this news also on the evening news,that the mortagage failures will be just as bad this year.

    SO where are the JOBS?

    Why aren't illegal aliens deported out?

    Where are our Republicans that were going to start a turn around?

    Why hasn't the federal budget been cut deep?

    Won't be long after the citizens have been booted from their jobs and booted out of their homes that there will be some protests in the streets and growing louder
    "When you have knowledge,you have a responsibility to do better"_ Paula Johnson

    "I did then what I knew to do. When I knew better,I did better"_ Maya Angelou

  4. #14
    Senior Member swatchick's Avatar
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    It is bad in both Miami Dade and Broward Counties and part of it is due to all those condos being built and then flipped over and over. The cities and counties went on a spending spree with the extra money they were making in taxes from those who bought around the time of the boom. I can't believe for one minute the cities and counties didn't realize that no one was going to actually live in those places not to mention the bubble would burst. Now the cities and counties are in big trouble since property values have gone down and all those deliquent property taxes and have to cut vital services.
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