Tag Archives: US Property

Construction of new homes down 10.6% in Oct

Construction of new homes unexpectedly plunged in the United States last month, as builders waited to see whether lawmakers would extend a tax credit for homebuyers.

The results underscore how much the housing market has been relying on government support for its fledgling recovery.

The tax credit of up to US$8,000 for first-time owners was due to expire on Nov 30, but Congress voted to extend it earlier this month and expand it to more buyers, after intense pressure from real estate agents and homebuilders.

Meanwhile, consumer prices edged up slightly faster than expected in October, driven higher by another increase in energy prices and the biggest jump in new car prices in 28 years.

Still, prices are lower than they were a year ago and inflation is expected to remain subdued as the economy struggles to emerge from a deep recession.

A strong housing market is needed to support a broad economic recovery.

The Commerce Department said yesterday that construction of new homes and apartments fell 10.6 per cent in October to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 529,000, from an upwardly revised 592,000 in September. Economists had expected a pace of 600,000.

Buyers who have owned their current homes for at least five years are now eligible for tax credits of up to US$6,500, while first-time homebuyers would still get up to US$8,000. To qualify, buyers have to sign a purchase agreement by April 30. Applications for building permits, a gauge of future activity, fell 4 per cent to an annual rate of 552,000 units. That also missed analysts’ expectations of 580,000.

Meanwhile, the National Association of Home Builders said on Tuesday its housing market index remained unchanged in November, reflecting a cautious outlook from residential developers as they waited to learn whether Congress would extend a homebuyer tax credit.

The trade association said its index stood at 17 for the second straight month. The Labor Department said the cost of living rose more than forecast in October as Americans paid more for fuel, while so-called core prices held at a pace that supports the Federal Reserve’s forecast for tame inflation.

The 0.3 per cent rise in the consumer-price index in October followed a 0.2 per cent increase in September. Excluding food and energy costs, the core index rose 0.2 per cent for a second month.

Unemployment at a 26-year high of 10.2 per cent and wages that were down 5.2 per cent in September from a year earlier are giving companies such as Wal-Mart Stores little room to raise prices.

Fed chairman Ben Bernanke said this week that the economic ‘headwinds’ will limit the recovery, allowing interest rates to stay low for an ‘extended period’.

‘I don’t see anything in the report that suggests there’s any real inflation flare-up,’ said Joseph LaVorgna, chief US economist at Deutsche Bank Securities Inc in New York. ‘The Fed is comfortably on hold.’

Economists had forecast the consumer price index would rise 0.2 per cent.

The core index was forecast to rise 0.1 per cent, according to the Bloomberg survey. Compared to a year earlier, consumer prices were down 0.2 per cent. Core prices rose 1.7 per cent from October 2008 after a 1.5 per cent year-over-year gain in September. Energy costs increased 1.5 per cent in October, led by fuel oil and gasoline.

The year-over-year declines in the consumer price index are getting smaller as crude oil prices increase from an almost five-year low in December 2008.

Gold futures rose to record high of US$1,151 an ounce yesterday, as stronger-than-expected US consumer prices stirred inflation worries. US December gold futures were up US$10.20 at US$1,149.60 an ounce at 1417 GMT on the Comex division of Nymex. Just minutes earlier, it scaled an all-time high US$1,151 an ounce.

Source : Business Times – 19 Nov 2009

Time to break free from the cult of homeownership

Studies have shown the risks of owning a home in the US

Here’s a radical notion: Let’s rethink the cult of homeownership in America.

Why, a sensible person might ask, do we need to do this when millions of homeowners faced foreclosure in the last year alone, and an estimated 15 million more own homes worth less than their mortgages?

Clearly, one might conclude, the bloom is already off the homeownership rose.

The answer is simple. Even in the middle of this collapse, when people were asked about their expectations for house price appreciation over the next year, the answers shock.

Zillow.com reports that at the end of 2008, with prices falling, 70 per cent of those surveyed said they did not think their house price would decline over the next six months, and more than a quarter expected it to actually increase.

Many people also still rely on outdated measures in deciding whether to buy or rent. For example, they often base the decision to own on how long they will be in a home.

But people predictably understate the chance that they will be forced to move because of a job loss, divorce, death of a spouse or disability.

Furthermore, the focus of efforts under the federal national stabilisation programme to deal with foreclosures is to recycle them back into the hands of homeowners or, in the case of small, multi-unit apartment buildings, resident landlord/owners.

We are a country still in the thrall of homeownership.

Nearly a decade ago, a colleague and I edited a book about the promotion of low-income homeownership, with the subtitle Examining the Unexamined Goal.

Study after study pointed out the risks of homeownership. One used repeat sales data to look at what properties bought from 1982 through 1999 sold for in Boston, Denver, Philadelphia and Chicago.

In Chicago – which never had much price fluctuation, even in 1995, its worst year – only 9 per cent of houses on the market sold at a loss.

But in Boston, which had a larger price correction, 45 per cent of houses sold in 1993 and 1994 sold at a loss. Worse still, 69 per cent of houses in Denver sold in 1988 and 1989 sold at a loss.

In places such as Los Angeles, which was not part of the study but where house prices cycle a great deal, high percentages of owners during periods of decline have had to hand the keys back to their lenders to get out of underwater mortgages, or fork over a lot of cash at the closing table when they sold.

Ironically, to some people, owning may make more sense today than when housing markets were booming.

After all, chances are greater now that people will buy at or near the bottom.

But should Americans assume that homeownership is always the right choice?

We should spend as much time thinking about how public policy can encourage intelligent housing choices as we have thinking about how it can encourage intelligent mortgage choices. The choice to own or rent comes first.

Let’s assume that the way to get out from underneath the weight of foreclosures is to not let speculators and homeowners at risk of falling behind again roll the dice.

Let’s instead consider programmes that aggregate ownership of properties, especially two- to four-unit ones, in the hands of non-profits that can rent them out.

These small complexes are estimated to account for up to two in five foreclosures.

It might make more sense to get these properties into the hands of nonprofits that own many properties, so that a single rental vacancy constitutes the loss of only a small fraction of rental income.

By contrast, one vacancy could constitute up to 100 per cent of the rental income needed to make the mortgage payment for a resident/owner of a single small property, making that a less stable investment.

It’s time we make homeownership just one alternative in a more innovative, affordable and broader housing market.

By ERIC S BELSKY, executive director of the Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard University

Source : Business Times – 17 Nov 2009