Archive for June 12th, 2009

Will Higher Interest Rates Slow the Housing Rebound?

Continue Reading Add comment June 12th, 2009

lefrak.jpg

Real estate exec Jamie LeFrak disagreed with my blog item earlier this week that declared home prices had hit bottom. His argument? The recent uptick in sales is a “life preserver” tossed to the industry by Washington in the form of low rate, government-insured mortgages.

“Now that the Fed is beginning to lose control of the currency and therefore lose the ability to maintain these artificial rates, you will see a second wave of lower housing pricing,” he says. That’s a shot of his grandfather’s LeFrak City development in Queens by the way.

When will the bottom come? LeFrak says it’s when home prices revert back to their average multiple of 3.3 times the median income of a city or when the typical mortgage payment is 110% of what you’d pay in rent.

“You can expect this second leg down concurrent with interest rate hikes which the futures markets are predicting for no later than November and the bond markets are showing for mid-2010,” LeFrak says.

“The real bottom is somewhere in 2011 or 2012 when everyone (including journalists) is sick of discussing the entire real estate asset class and it has been discredited as an investment. You will also notice this when all the ‘bargain hunters’ are out of the market as well because they can’t afford the cost of mortgage interest to ’snap up’ the bargains.”

lefrak city.jpg

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What happened in Phoenix

Continue Reading Add comment June 12th, 2009

Did you happen to see the latest home-price stats from S&P/Case-Shiller, or did you avert your eyes? Here’s what struck me: As of March 2009, every metro area in Case-Shiller’s 20-city index, without exception, has fallen double digits from its peak. Ten are down more than 30%. Eight have dropped more than 40%. Las Vegas is down 50%. Phoenix? It doesn’t get any worse than Phoenix. According to Case-Shiller, between June 2006 and March 2009 the average house in Phoenix lost a staggering 53% of its value. Possibly during the Great Depression, but almost certainly at no time since then, have house prices in a major metropolitan area fallen by more than half. It’s almost unbelievable. Brother, tell me you didn’t buy a house during the boom in Phoenix! Read more »

Investors bet on Detroit housing market

Continue Reading Add comment June 12th, 2009

Detroit’s housing market is heating up. The city’s median home price has fallen 32% to $77,700, and these cheap houses have got sales jumping, with volume up 23% in April compared with April 2008. Read more »


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