
LAS VEGAS, NEV. — “2007 has been a year of challenge; 2008 will be a year of opportunity for serious buyers and for REALTORS®,” NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun told a packed house at the NAR Conference Nov. 13.
What Yun characterized as “the roulette economy” of 2007, fueled by subprime greed and then buyers’ fear, is almost over, according to an article in Realtor Magazine Online of Nov. 16.
With a favorable economy, pent-up home demand, and Wall Street “fessing up to its losses and cleaning up its underwriting,” 2008 will be a healthy market for serious buyers, he said.
Home prices nationally have declined by some 1.5 percent in 2007, which is "no big deal" after years of rapid appreciation, said Yun. In addition, he noted, there are still many markets such as Utah, North Carolina, and Tennessee that are appreciating and may even be undervalued.
“Realtors® have to educate their clients that all markets are local and that problems in a few areas aren’t meaningful," he said. "A national picture of the real estate market is just about as valuable as giving a national high temperature for the day."
Yun also noted that while the credit crunch slowed deals in 2007, much of the pain is being felt in the subprime area, while other mortgage sectors are stabilizing.
Subprime constitutes only about 10 percent of mortgage loans, but accounts for some 40 percent of current foreclosures. Going forward, proposed federal legislation that would increase FHA loan limits should help moderate-income buyers, said Yun.
Yun expects GDP growth of 2.8 percent and job growth of 1.1 percent in 2008. Inflation should also remain under 3 percent, and interest rates should rise only slightly, he predicts. “For buyers who are into home ownership for the long term, housing still remains the best investment,” he concluded.
Other national sales downturns in the last 30 years were spurred by broad economic problems, Yun said. This year, by contrast, economic fundamentals remain solid, with the U.S. gross domestic product expected to grow by a respectable 2 percent, supported by 2 million job gains in the last two years and continuing low interest rates.
Yun said 2007 existing-home sales will exceed 5.5 million, close to the level in 2002, a record-setting year. At the same time, home prices remain near record highs despite drops in a few markets.
Following Yun’s presentation, former NAR economist John Tuccillo gave attendees a preview of what the next real estate market would look like.
When recovery comes, said Tuccillo, most clients will be Gen X and Gen Y. These younger buyers don’t want relationship selling; instead they want the best bottom line deal you can find and the one-stop shopping to make the deal faster so they can get on with their lives.
Other big buyers in the next decade will be retiring boomers, who will want homes in 24-hour cities and college towns. “Real estate practitioners have traditionally worked with first-time buyers. Think of these people as last-time buyers,” he quipped.
It’s hard to predict when any local market will begin to improve, but there are three indicators, said Tuccillo. First would be a drop in new listings, indicating sellers are withdrawing from the market. Second, days on market will fall. And third, the gap between listing price and sales price will narrow.
—Source: REALTOR® Magazine Online
Posts: 13 | Views: 565
Posts: 38 | Views: 575
Posts: 9 | Views: 187
Posts: 10 | Views: 196
Posts: 28 | Views: 802
Posts: 5 | Views: 324
Login or register to post comments
Comments (2)
We welcome your thoughts and information related to this article. Click here to read our "Policies and Standards for Comments".
Sat, 11/24/2007 - 6:16pm - Posted by: Anonymous
I agree these prices are still out of reality. Also Realestate has appreciated at a much slower rate than the Stock Market. A bad long term investment. Resort towns will be the last to turn around because they are the most overpriced due to speculation. 2010 at the earliest for an actual turn around( Hitting Bottom).
Wed, 11/21/2007 - 4:40pm - Posted by: Anonymous
Jeez, why on earth does the media continue to quote Realtors like they are unbiased experts? They only make money if people buy homes. They don't care if your house falls in value after you purchase it, they already got paid. And believe me, they all knew the market was headed for a crash while. Yet they shamelessly kept on cheerleading. Folks, house prices have just begun to fall. If you are thinking about buying, do yourself a favor and wait. Also, I see they are still saying its a great time to buy. Have you ever heard them say it wasn't a good time to buy?