Friday, March 30, 2012

HOUSING MARKET REACHES TURNING POINT


Housing Market Reaches Turning Point, Economists Say

Economists say the housing market is starting to heal, but too many people aren't aware of it because they're judging a housing recovery on the wrong sign: What’s happening with home prices. 
Paul Dales at Capital Economics says higher prices won’t be the sign that the housing market is on the mend — that can be a lagging indicator — but rather an increase in overall home sales. And that's showing signs of improvement: Existing home sales in 2011 rose to 4.26 million compared to 4.19 million in 2010. In the last six months alone, home sales have increased 13 percent. 
As a recent article at Fortune points out, “The evidence reminds us that perhaps we should change our expectations of what a housing recovery might look like, particularly following a crisis marked by record foreclosures and a financial crisis that sent the economy into one of the deepest recessions. The recovery we have been anticipating is defined more on the rate at which the glut of vacant properties comes off the market as opposed to any steady rise in prices, which some think won't happen for another few years.”
Source: “The One Number to Watch for a Housing Recovery,” Fortune (March 20, 2012)

Friday, March 9, 2012

NAR Housing Affordability Index hits 42-year high in January

NAR Housing Affordability Index hits 42-year high in January

Index based on home price, income, mortgage interest rate data



<a href="http://www.shutterstock.com/gallery-142054p1.html">House and penny image</a> via Shutterstock.House and penny image via Shutterstock.
The National Association of Realtors' (NAR) Housing Affordability Index reached a record high this January, at 206.1. January 2012 is the first month since the index's inception in 1970 that the index has hit or passed 200, the group announced this week.












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NAR Housing Affordability Index hits 42-year high in January | Inman News