3tilføjet af

US Home Prices-Steepest Drop in 20 Years

Tuesday August 28, 9:58 am ET
S&P Says Housing Prices Fell in 2Q by Steepest Rate Since Its Index Was Started in 1987
NEW YORK (AP) -- U.S. home prices fell 3.2 percent in the second quarter, the steepest rate of decline since Standard & Poor's began its nationwide housing index in 1987, the research group said Tuesday.

The decline in home prices around the nation shows no evidence of a market recovery anytime soon, one of the architects of the index said.
MacroMarkets LLC Chief Economist Robert Shiller said the declining residential real estate market "shows no signs of slowing down."
The report came a day after the National Association of Realtors said sales of existing homes dropped for a fifth straight month in July while the number of unsold homes shot up to a record level.
The S&P/Case-Schiller quarterly index tracks price trends among existing single-family homes across the nation compared with a year earlier .
A separate index that covers 20 U.S. cities fell 3.5 percent in June from a year earlier. A 10-city index fell 4.1 percent from a year earlier.
Housing is among the economic indicators closely watched by Federal Reserve policymakers.
After five years of rapidly rising home prices, the market stalled last year, with prices holding steady or falling as sales slowed. Since then, lenders have made it more difficult for some people to get mortgages by tightening standards just as foreclosures rise and some who borrowed at adjustable rates facing higher payments they can't meet.
Problems have spread from those with poor credit repayment histories to more creditworthy borrowers.
The Fed has taken a number of steps aimed at stabilizing the situation, and market watchers look further for a possible cut in the federal funds rate, which is the rate commercial banks charge each other for short-term loans. That rate has been kept steady at 5.25 percent for more than a year.
The Fed has its next regularly scheduled meeting on Sept. 18.
Fifteen of the cities surveyed for S&P's 20-city index showed a year-over-year decline in prices in June.
Prices in Boston dropped in June at a slower rate than they did in May, continuing a trend that started at the beginning of the year. In April 2006, Boston was the first metropolitan area to show a year-over-year decline, so any turnaround there could be an early sign of recovery.
S&P said it needed more data to determine whether Boston would be the first area to improve.
Detroit led the cities with the biggest price declines, with an 11 percent drop from June of last year. Other cities with falling prices included Tampa, Fla., San Diego and Washington, D.C., which all recorded drops of at least 7 percent.
Seattle and Charlotte, N.C., were on the small list of cities that saw prices rise in the same period. Seattle prices rose 8 percent in June while Charlotte saw a 6.8 percent increase.
In Monday's report, the National Association of Realtors said sales of existing homes dipped by 0.2 percent in July from June to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.75 million units.
The median price of a home sold last month slid to $230,200, down by 0.6 percent from the median price a year ago. It marked the 12th consecutive month that home prices have declined, a record stretch.
http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/070828/home_price_index.html?.v=10
tilføjet af

Median home prices to fall in U.S.

Median home prices to fall in U.S.
By David Leonhardt and Vikas Bajaj Published: August 26, 2007
NEW YORK: The median price of American homes is expected to fall this year for the first time since federal housing agencies began keeping statistics in 1950.
Economists say the decline, which could be foreshadowed in a widely followed government price index to be released this week, will probably be modest - from 1 percent to 2 percent - but could continue in 2008 and 2009. Rather than being limited to the once-booming Northeast and California, price declines are also occurring in cities like Chicago, Minneapolis and Houston, where the increases of the last decade were modest by comparison.
The expected reversal is particularly striking because many government officials and housing-industry executives had said that a nationwide decline would never happen, even though prices had fallen in some coastal areas as recently as the early 1990s.
While the housing slump has already rattled financial markets, it has so far had only a modest effect on consumer spending and economic growth. But forecasters now say that its impact will lead to a slowdown over the next year or two.
"For most people, this is not a disaster," said Nigel Gault, an economist with Global Insight, a research firm. "But it's enough to cause them to pull back."
Today in Business
DBS to inject emergency funds into CDO instrumentInternational overview of U.S. financial markets soughtHomeowners struggle with reality of higher rates
On an inflation-adjusted basis, the national median price - the level at which half of all homes are more expensive and half are less - is not likely to return to its 2007 peak for more than a decade, according to Moody's Economy.com, a research firm.
The drop would contradict the widely held notion that there is no such thing as a nationwide housing slump. A 2004 report jointly written by the top economists at five organizations - the industry groups for real estate agents, home builders and community bankers, as well as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the large government-sponsored backers of home mortgages - was typical. It said that there was "little possibility of a widespread national decline since there is no national housing market."
Global Insight estimates that the home-price index to be released Thursday by the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight, a regulatory agency, will show a decline of about 1 percent between the first and second quarter of this year. Other forecasters predict that the index will rise slightly in the second quarter before falling later this year.
In all, Global Insight expects a decline of 4 percent, or roughly 10 percent in inflation-adjusted terms, between the peak earlier this year and the projected low point in 2009.
In California, prices are expected to decline 16 percent, or about 20 percent after taking inflation into account.
The index used by the government, which compares the sale price of individual homes over time, is intended to describe the actual value of a typical house. Since the index began in 1975, it has slipped from one quarter to the next on a few occasions, but it has never fallen over a full year.
Another index dating back to 1950, calculated by Freddie Mac, has also never shown an annual decline.
http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/08/26/business/housing.php
tilføjet af

Første fald i 57år

Der er ikke set et sådan fald siden statistikken blev oprettet i 1950'erne. Nej vi er ikke i en krise.
tilføjet af

Volatile markets

Strand board sidings have for decades decided, the market (prices)
A steep decline in market values, (in North America)compares to increased market prices other where.
The steep decline, has a lot to do, with de declining (Dollar) prices, and the demanding
€ market.
The story is halve true, half untold.
Men mærkeligt nok, følger vi efter, og vores hus priser falder 20% i gennemsnit.
Cedar siding i Europe, er oppe i ca, 20% I sidste 12 måneder, ergo er priser i N.A
oppe, ergo byggeboom on its way down.
USA, stil leads the way.
We may like it or not, but that,s the way it is.
vh
Boning


Volatile markets
Strand board sidings have for decades decided, the market (prices)
A steep decline in market values, (in North America)compares to increased market prices other where.
The steep decline, has a lot to do, with de declining (Dollar) prices, and the demanding
€ market.
The story is halve true, half untold.
Men mærkeligt nok, følger vi efter, og vores hus priser falder 20% i gennemsnit.

Volatile markets
Strand board sidings have for decades decided, the market (prices)
A steep decline in market values, (in North America)compares to increased market prices other where.
The steep decline, has a lot to do, with de declining (Dollar) prices, and the demanding
€ market.
The story is halve true, half untold.
Men mærkeligt nok, følger vi efter, og vores hus priser falder 20% i gennemsnit.

Volatile markets
Strand board sidings have for decades decided, the market (prices)
A steep decline in market values, (in North America)compares to increased market prices other where.
The steep decline, has a lot to do, with de declining (Dollar) prices, and the demanding
€ market.
The story is halve true, half untold.
Men mærkeligt nok, følger vi efter, og vores hus priser falder 20% i gennemsnit.
SuperDebat.dk er det tidligere debatforum på SOL.dk, som nu er skilt ud separat.