NAR Economist comments on the US Home Market
Posted by Gary Ashton: ADMIN on Friday, November 12th, 2010 at 12:59pm.Consumer confidence and business spending
are key to whether the U.S. housing market will move into a virtuous or
a vicious cycle in 2011, NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun told a packed
audience at the Residential Economic Outlook Forum Friday in New
Orleans.
After the downturn, the housing market has
clawed its way back to a point of near stability, Yun said, with the
pace of new foreclosures easing, sales moving toward historically normal
levels and prices on a national basis gaining modestly.
At the same time, affordability remains
strong. He said all of the price excesses from the housing bubble have
been squeezed out. In San Diego, for example, buyers today would pay
$1,564 a month in mortgage payments for a house that at the height of
the boom would have cost them $2,833 a month.
The broader economy is also showing positive
signs, with businesses enjoying strong profits, sitting on huge cash
reserves, and even adding jobs. Yun predicts this positive trend to
continue into 2011, with existing home sales reaching 5.5 million units,
prices rising a modest 1 percent, and the U.S. gross domestic product
increasing to about 2.5 percent.
“We are entering a virtuous cycle,” he said.
But for the positive trend to continue, he added, businesses will have
to start spending some of their cash to fuel job growth at a far greater
pace than they’re doing now. Currently, businesses are adding jobs at a
pace of about 100,000 a month. That needs to grow to about 400,000 a
month for unemployment
to start shrinking.
The scenario will be far more negative if
businesses continue to sit on their cash. In that case, sales will fall,
inventories will rise, the high rate of foreclosures will resume, and
the cost to the federal government of bailing out Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac will surge.
Federal Reserve Governor Thomas Koenig, who
shared the data with Yun, said the Fed’s continued effort to spur the
economy, most recently through a $600 billion bond buying program, is
understandable given concerns over the slow pace of growth. But the
continued subsidization of the market could unleash inflationary forces.
Yun said he sees possible evidence of
inflation building, but it’s not visible now because the housing-cost
portion of inflation measurements is holding down prices.
Source : www.Realtor.org
Gary Ashton
The Ashton Real Estate Group of RE/MAX Elite
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