Click Here REALTORŪ Magazine Online: The real estate professional's business support tool.
HOME | ABOUT US | CONTACT US
YOUR INTERACTIVE MAGAZINE
REALTOR.ORG/realtormag
.
Topic Areas Daily News / Blogs / Statistics
Prospecting / Customer Handouts
Court Cases / Ethics Q&A
Buyer's Guides / New Tools
Architecture / Home Trends
Sales Meetings / Profiles



Daily Real Estate News  |  May 15, 2009  |   Homes May Be Undervalued Today
After dropping for two years, home prices appear to be bottoming out, and any further declines would be an overcorrection, NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun told thousands of practitioners at the REALTORSŪ Midyear Legislative Meetings in Washington, D.C., on Thursday.

The median national home price today is about $169,000, down almost 14 percent from a year ago and an estimated 30 percent from its peak. Today’s prices are justified by the fundamentals of the economy and may even represent an undervaluation, Yun said.

Lender Policies Hinder Recovery

Distressed sales, which today comprise about 50 percent of transactions nationwide, are creating market distortions in otherwise stable neighborhoods. “We’re only capturing transaction prices,” he said, and those prices might be 20 percent to 25 percent below actual values. For that reason, it’s possible that widely cited projections that a third or more of homeowners are underwater might be off the mark, he said.

The consequences of these missed projections could be huge. Lenders, shying away from refinancing mortgages of troubled owners, exacerbate the downward spiral of homeowners’ financial position and that, by extension, hurts the broader economy.

Contributing to the problem is the lack of reasonably priced financing for higher-cost homes at a time when declining prices, low rates, and the home buyer tax credit are helping the entry-level market.

Indeed, while housing overall is at a 9.5 month supply, down from double digits not that long ago, homes above $729,750—the threshold for jumbo loans—face a 40-month supply.

Key Test

By summer, all of the incentives that have been put into place by the government will have had several months to work, Yun said. If sales start picking up significantly, then prices should stabilize and trigger a broader economic recovery.

If sales don’t show a significant response, then the federal government might have to look at another big injection of funds into the economy, something no one has an appetite for.

Yun’s forecast reflects the brighter scenario: “My projection is home sales will be 10 to 20 percent higher the second half of this year than last year and we will come out of this recession in 2010,” he said.

—Robert Freedman, REALTORŪ Magazine

Browse all of today's news
E-mail this page to a friend
Give us feedback

Search news
Launch my search
 
Subscribe to news
Subscribe to News
Daily and weekly real estate news, trends, NAR press releases, convention coverage, plus exclusive features and columns.

RSS Feed
Get the Daily Real Estate News delivered straight to your desktop or news aggregator. (New to RSS? Learn the basics here.)
 
 
SHARE YOUR INSIGHTS
How did you sell it?
Tell us how you overcame hurdles to sell a challenging or very unique listing!

 






11/21/2009 09:32 AM05/15/2009