Here's a look at NAR's economic forecast for 2009—along with advice from veteran practitioners on how to turn the tables to your advantage.

Read the 2009 forecast for:
To succeed in this environment, you need to turn the tough facts about the economy to your favor by identifying your market opportunities and painting a compelling picture for your customers about why now is the time to get into the market either as a seller or a buyer.
To help you chart your course for the year, we've linked together NAR's forecast for the economy and housing for the year with insight from veteran practitioners on how to leverage today's conditions for maximum sales. (See our commercial market outlook for 2009.)
HOME SALES
The Environment
After falling for two years in a row, sales of existing homes are expected to edge up 6 percent in 2009 to 5.3 million. Even with an increase in unemployment, improved affordability is the reason. NAR's affordability index jumped to 131 at the end of 2008, up 17 percent from 112 in 2007. It's expected to hover around a still-high 128 in 2009. The index means households earning the national median income have 131 percent of the income needed to buy the national median-priced house.
Meanwhile, new-home sales, already off more than 50 percent from their peak of 1 million in the third quarter of 2006, are expected to continue dropping, to about 413,000 in 2009.
Prices have dropped nationally about 12 percent from their peak in 2006, from a national median of $221,900 to $198,600. In some of the markets that were hottest during the boom, prices have dropped even more, as much as 30 percent in Los Angeles and 24 percent in Las Vegas. The drop has made life tough for sellers with little equity in their homes: Some 40 percent of sales in the third quarter of 2008 were distressed sales, either short sales or foreclosures, according to NAR data. For 2009, prices are expected to turn a corner.
What You Can Do
FOR-SALE INVENTORY
The Environment
Inventories of homes for sale around the country expanded during the housing slowdown, reaching a 10.6 months' supply in 2007, almost twice the 5.5 months' supply considered balanced by historical standards. Inventories started easing in 2008, falling to 9.9 months in the third quarter.
Looking to 2009, new housing starts—which peaked at 2.2 million units in 2005—will continue to head down, NAR says. That's not good for builders, but it's good for inventories. On the other hand, delinquencies and foreclosures are projected to rise in 2009, putting more distressed housing on the market and keeping downward pressure on prices.
Expect a national average of 8.8 months' supply in 2009 based on market trends in late 2008. To help spur sales—in addition to pushing for an interest-rate buy down—NAR is asking Congress to eliminate the repayment requirement in the home buyer tax credit, enacted in 2008, and to make the tax credit open to all buyers, not just those who haven't been home owners in at least three years.
One development in late 2008 that was expected to help boost demand is the decision by the Federal Reserve to buy mortgage-backed securities on the secondary market. The move was expected to lower mortgage interest rates which will help return inventory to balanced conditions.
What You Can Do
MORTGAGE FINANCING
The Environment
Fixed-rate loans are projected to stay at a comfortable 6.4 percent in 2009. However, the general economic downturn makes these normally favorable levels inadequate for spurring the kind of activity needed to trigger big reductions in inventories, says NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun.
Recognizing the need to keep credit flowing after the freeze in 2008, the Federal Reserve embarked on an aggressive lowering of its target overnight rate, dropping it by more than 150 percent from 5 percent in 2007 to 2.1 percent at the close of 2008. Despite that accommodating policy, the actual rates available to consumers remained largely unchanged. The average rate for a 30-year fixed mortgage eased only marginally in 2008, from 6.3 percent to 6.1 percent.
Why aren't rates falling? The federal government's massive bailout of Wall Street triggered large-scale purchases of bank credit debt at the expense of mortgage-backed securities. That's why NAR is championing federal intervention to lower interest rates. The association favors using a portion of the $700 billion in rescue funds for an interest-rate buydown.
In a meeting with NAR in late November, the U.S. Treasury Department was receptive to the idea, and NAR will be championing legislation to make that possible in early 2009. In the meantime, the availability of financing remained constrained, with lenders keeping standards tight.
They're approving mortgage applications only from borrowers with a 680 credit score or higher who are willing to put at least 10 percent down for conventional mortgages—a high hurdle for first-time buyers with no equity to draw on and for move-up buyers who've seen their equity depleted.
What You Can Do
Take advantage of the tax credit. The first-time home buyer tax credit enables buyers who haven't owned a home for at least three years to take a credit against their 2009 tax return if they buy a house as their primary residence, but they have to act soon because the program ends July 1.
The credit amount is 10 percent of the home price up to a maximum $7,500. Income limits are $75,000 for individuals and $150,000 for households, though some buyers earning above those limits can get a smaller credit. The credit must be paid back over 15 years, so it acts like a zero-interest loan. NAR is seeking to extend the end date, expand the credit to include all buyers, and have the repayment requirement eliminated.