Housing Data.
Posted: May 26, 2009 at 8:50 am
The numbers are still staggering. This is a drop of 32.2% from the peak of 2006 nationwide, and worse in some regions. We are also back to 2002 housing prices in aggregate.
We will not go so far as to call the housing market robust because it is not. It is far from that. But the new data with permits is mixed if you back out the multi-family projects. We are also starting to see a slight resurgence of activity. We have no hopes that the housing and construction activity will look anything at all like late 2004 through mid-2007. But this Case-Shiller data differs from other reports we have been seeing.
There is also a silver lining in the Case-Shiller data. The lower that index goes, the more and more affordable housing becomes. We would also note that while these prices were tanking the worst during the Q1 period also coincided with what was a foreclosure moratorium period where many quick sales and pre-foreclosure sales were commanding dirt cheap prices for qualified buyers. The lower prices are now driving the beginnings of what seems to be higher demand.
For the market to react this way makes the obvious even more obvious. Housing was grossly overpriced for years. Those part-time realtors who told you that housing always goes up, well you can call them and ask them about that now. They are easy to find. They are at home, or at their parents’ houses.
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