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  1. #1
    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    Housing Recovery Is Looking A Lot Shakier Than Expected

    Housing Recovery Is Looking A Lot Shakier Than Expected


    On Friday February 26, 2010, 11:51 am EST

    The recent slump in housing is making some analysts uneasy about a recovery that many thought sustainable just a couple months ago and comes at a time when the Federal Reserve is nearing the end of a critical, year-long program to support the mortgage market.

    "Housing is at a pivotal, ambiguous point," says Ted Gayer, co-director of Economic Studies at the Brookings Institution.

    A spate of recent reports from home sales to mortgage activity has been starkly negative. And, even if some of it can be written off to seasonal patterns, namely weather, the weakness is not what what people expected with the extension and expansion of the government's homebuyer tax credit that jacked sales for several months last summer and fall.

    New homes sales fell to a record low in January, extending a two-month slide; pending and existing home sales were down in December; homebuilder sentiment in January fell back to where it was last June, and mortgage applications have fallen three of the past four weeks,

    * Existing-Home Sales Plunge In January

    "The data is telling us that it is weaker than we've been anticipating," says Pat Newport, a housing analyst at IHS Global Insight. "What the housing market has needed all along is a better economy."

    Even the optimists never expected a traditional housing recovery with unemployment stubbornly high, the consumer balance sheet still in repair mode and credit conditions stingy, but right now there's palpable worry about momentum-especially given a string of solid months in mid- to late-2009.

    The Mortgage Bankers Association's outlook was and remains "fairly cautious," says Michael Fratantony, vice president of research. "I think we were getting some false signals in the late summer and early fall, when we seeing some price increase, that were more than the seasonal impact."

    The MBA is expecting a modest year-over-year increase in home sales and housing starts, with prices leveling out.

    Global Insight, for one, says it will probably lower its projections for housing starts and new home sales. The homebuyer tax credit, which now applies to repeat buyers and not just first-time ones, "isn't panning out, its' not registering," says Newport. "Demand for new housing is a lot weaker than we thought it would be."

    As sales jumped last year, making the tax credit look like a major success, some analysts feared that it would hurt sales later, essentially pushing activity forward. That now appears to be the case.

    Bargain Prices Cut Both Ways

    Meanwhile, foreclosed properties continue to dominate sales with less than the usual activity in the middle market, where people trade up to new or better existing homes.

    "Foreclosed homes are selling at remarkable pace," says Richard Smith, CEO of Realogy, the national real estate company, whose brands include Coldwell Banker, Century 21 and The Corcoran Group. "People are looking for the value play. The majority of homes are being bought by investors and first-time buyers..

    Smith says the government's mortgage modification program meant to avert foreclosures "is doing nothing more than prolonging the housing recovery. It is doing more harm than good."

    The government's Making Home Affordable program has led to slightly more than 118,000 mortgage modifications since its inception last April. Some 830,000 people have qualified for a trial modification the program.

    Some 4.5 million homes are expected to fall to foreclosure this year, following 2.8 million in 2009. In contrast, existing homes sales for the two-year period will average about 5.5 million.

    ""In spite of the best intentions, this is not going to work," says Smith.

    Smith remains optimistic, at least through the first half of the year, saying he sees signs of a recovery at the high end and that the overall market needs nothing more than a little help from an improving economy. He's uncertain, however, about the second half.

    All Eyes On Fed MBS Progam

    For some analysts, uncertainty is just around the bend. That's because one of the government's most successful programs is scheduled to end by March 31. That's the Federal Reserve's massive $1.42 billion dollar program to buy mortgage backed securities, MBS, and government agency debt.

    The program, initiated about a year ago, lowered 30-year mortgages rates from roughly 6.00 percent to 5.00 percent and in the process narrowed the spread between 10-year Treasury note and long-term loans to more attractive levels. The program created much needed liquidity in the mortgage lending market because private firms were not lending.

    The Fed has been gradually slowing those purchases to create, as stated in its January FOMC statement, "a smooth transition" for the markets.

    "I do see headwinds in the housing market," says Scott Anderson, senior economist with Wells Fargo. "The headwinds will intensify. The first real test of that will be the end of the MBS program at the end of March.

    The government's goal is have the private mortgage market pick up more of the lending.

    "If you stop doing it, mortgage rates will go up--we just don't know how much, " says veteran Fed watcher David Jones of DMJ Advisors.

    Rates To Rise But How Much?

    The market's range for that increase is somewhat large--between a fifth of a percentage point and a full percentage point. A consensus, however, seems to have formed around half a percentage point. At the worst then, 30-year mortgage rates would be around 6 percent, which is still historically low and thus presumably attractive to borrowers.

    "It will have a negative impact, but not a great negative impact," says Jed Smith, an economist with the National Association of Realtors. "I don't think it will kill the housing market recovery."

    Another uncertainly is what the Fed does after it stops buying. Does it begin selling its massive portfolio or does it hold it? Does it wait a short or long amount of time to sell? Does it sell gradually, regularly or more aggressively? Does it signal its intentions or not?

    "I don't think the Fed wants to be permanently supporting the housing market," says Gayer of Brookings. "The longer you stay in the harder it is for the private market to stand up again."

    The problem is no one knows because it hasn't been done before.

    "The Fed is going to be completely winging it," says Jones of the Fed's overall exit policy.

    The Fed is unlikely to change its plans at this point, unless a major negative hits the economy, although some say it should be willing to reconsider at this point.

    "The credit markets are still dysfunctional, the banking system is still in distress," says Brian Bethune, chief U.S. financial economist at IHS Global Insight. "There's no new credit flowing. The Fed is obviously getting too impatient about tightening credit."

    Future Options

    Other economists say Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke signaled his concern about the housing market and implied the Fed was paying very close attention to it in his two appearances before Congress this week.

    "The Fed has said it is constantly under review," says Robert Brusca, chief economist with Fact & Opinion Economics. "The Fed may have to revisit it."

    That could be as simply as re-entering the market, if interest rates too much.

    In addition, industry sources familiar with the thinking of Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and Bernanke about the MBS program say they are keenly aware of the downside risk.
    "He'[Bernanke] is only going to remove that money if the real estate market can sustain itself," said one source.

    "Geithner made it clear they're not going to do anything stupid," said another.

    That may be, but there's legitimate concern about the housing market recovery, even including those who rightly called its apparent bottom last spring.

    "There's an issue now as to whether we get a double dip in housing--and I think he will," says Jones.

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  2. #2
    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    Housing market shows weakness for 2nd month

    Big drop in January home sales show housing market could falter after federal support ends


    Alan Zibel, AP Real Estate Writer
    Friday February 26, 2010, 3:51 pm EST

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- Sales of previously owned homes plunged in January to their lowest level since summer, evidence that high unemployment and tight lending standards are undercutting the government's attempts to prop up the market.

    The results Friday, the weakest since June, were far worse than forecast and suggest the housing recovery will sputter without government support. The government has spent billions to keep mortgage rates low and give buyers tax breaks, but both programs are set to end this spring.

    "Most of the improvement that we've seen in housing over the past year has been tied to some sort of stimulus program," said Wells Fargo economist Mark Vitner. "Now that we're seeing those programs wind down, we're seeing that housing is quite a bit weaker than many people had thought."

    Consumers are nervous about the shaky economy and face tough hurdles in trying to qualify for home loans, said Danny Frank, an agent with Keller Williams Realty near Houston, Texas.

    "People are scared right now," he said.

    The National Association of Realtors said that home sales fell 7.2 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.05 million from a downwardly revised pace of 5.44 million in December. Economists expected a slight increase to a rate of 5.5 million.

    Home sales have been sluggish this winter even though the deadline for a tax credit for first-time buyers was extended. It had been set to expire on Nov. 30. That caused sales to surge last fall. Then Congress extended the deadline until April 30 and expanded it to existing homeowners who move.

    Analysts say the extended credit isn't having much impact so far.

    "With a few more months before the next round is scheduled to end, buyers have been taking their time," wrote Joel Naroff, chief economist with Naroff Economic Advisors.

    The housing report was another sign that consumers still aren't feeling comfortable making sizable purchases. With jobs still scarce, weak consumer spending is a key reason why economic growth is expected to be feeble this year.

    "There's a lot of underlying weakness in the world economy and national economy," said Bill Weaver, real estate professor at the University of Central Florida. "That's not the general economic environment in which people decide to go out and spend $200,000 on a house."

    Home sales are still up nearly 12 percent from the bottom, but are down 30 percent from their peak more than four years ago.

    Last month, sales declined throughout the country, falling the most -- nearly 11 percent -- in the Northeast. Sales fell by about 7 percent in the South and Midwest and by more than 5 percent in the West.

    Nationally, more than a quarter of buyers last month paid all cash, reflecting a surge of investors buying low-priced foreclosures, the Realtors group said. In Orlando, Coldwell Banker agent Cindy Brads says there is tremendous interest among buyers for homes priced at $150,000 and under. For anything below $60,000, it's not strange to get 20 offers for a property, she said, with a large percentage coming from investors.

    Nationwide, the median sales price was $164,700, unchanged from a year earlier and down about 3 percent from December. The inventory of unsold homes on the market was down slightly. There is a 7.8 month supply at the current sales pace, up from a recent low of 6.5 months in November.

    The bleak report comes after the government reported Wednesday that sales of newly built homes plunged 11 percent to a record low in January. The report, which measures signed contracts to buy homes rather than completed sales, also came as a surprise to economists.

    Another question hanging over the housing market this year is whether interest rates will rise, and by how much. The Federal Reserve's $1.25 trillion program to push down mortgage rates is scheduled to expire on March 31.

    After that program runs out, mortgage rates should not spike, but rather rise gradually to about 6 percent over the next year, predicts Cameron Findlay, chief economist at LendingTree.com. That will mean homebuyers may have to reduce their price range, and that trend could put downward pressure on prices.

    AP Business Writer Adrian Sainz in Miami contributed to this report.

    http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Housing-m ... 6.html?x=0
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