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Grim Outlook For Us Property Market As Prices Still Falling And Foreclosures Rising --> the graph added to end of article for effect Rate Topic: -----

#1 User is offline   cashinmattress 

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Posted 11 November 2009 - 02:21 PM

Grim outlook for US property market as prices still falling and foreclosures rising

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Residential property prices are falling in the US despite some indices showing recent gains while the number of foreclosures continues to rise.

Recent comments from some analysts that the market is recovering may be premature as the latest predictions now indicate that the bottom of the market has not been reached and prices are set to keep falling in 2010.

Property prices fell 0.4% from September to October and were down 0.9% from August, according to a market composite of housing prices compiled by Altos Research.

The composite of 10 major housing markets put home sales prices at $501,377 in October, down from $503,401 in September and $506,180 in August.

After dipping to $470,017 in January, the composite steadily increased through a July peak of $509,030, but has now declined every month since.

Altos Research projects prices will continue to decline until the end of 2009 due to seasonal trends.

Prices fell in 23 of the 26 markets surveyed during October. The greatest decline was in Salt Lake City where prices fell 3.3% in October.

Phoenix saw a 2.1% decline, Los Angeles was down 2% and Las Vegas was down 1.2% although the pace of the decline has slowed.

But although the overall trend is still downward some areas are seeing price increases such as San Francisco and San Jose where they increased 1.1%. Miami saw prices remaining static.

There are also signs that the foreclosure crisis is not weakening.

The rate of non-current loans, a combination of foreclosures and delinquencies as a percent of active loans, reached 12.49%, a record high in the US, according to a report from Lender Processing Services (LPS).


The LPS Mortgage Monitor report showed that the nation’s September foreclosure rate jumping to 3.12%, a 2.6% increase from the previous month and an 88.9% hike from last year.

Florida led the way with 10.4% of loans in foreclosure, and more than 22% of loans reported as non-current.

The total US delinquency rate now stands at 9.37%, according to the report, and the number of loans sinking further into delinquent status more than doubled the amount of foreclosure starts.

The six-month deterioration ratio rose in the past two months to 300%, meaning that for every loan that improves in status, three more deteriorate further, according to the report.

This large ‘shadow’ inventory of foreclosures and real estate-owned (REO) inventory indicates another onslaught of troubled loans in an already backed-up pipeline, according to the report.

Meanwhile a report from Deutsche Bank predicts that the US property market will lose almost a third, some 32%, of its aggregate value from peak to trough.

Price depreciation so far has wiped out about $5.7 trillion in housing wealth, reducing the US housing market aggregate value to $18.3 trillion, Deutsche said.

And, the market hasn’t hit bottom, yet, the bank says, with its report predicting that the declines in house prices, aggravated by sweeping foreclosures and the significant shadow inventory are set to depress prices even further in 2010.


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Oooh. The carnage! Bank Bail out Mk II. Credit crunch Mk II.

Meh. Leveraged asset + greed + ignorance AND/OR ineptitude = disaster.

Not surprisingly....Ammo sales, prices skyrocket
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#2 User is offline   Sybil13 

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Posted 11 November 2009 - 03:05 PM

Its an old article but still very current and worth considering in the light of this thread.....

Why US House Prices Will Keep Crashing

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And why should Britons worry about it?

Firstly because whatever our politicians are telling us, many banks won't want, or even be able, to lend very much while the losses on their dodgy US dabblings keep growing.

And secondly because what happens in US housing is a good guide to our own property market. The US crash started a good 12-18 months before ours, yet it's continuing. There are more than enough domestic reasons why British property prices will keep dropping, as we've pointed out several times recently: Longer dole queues are bad news for house prices. But while the housing market keeps imploding on the other side of the Atlantic, there's even less chance of a turnaround over here.


#3 User is offline   interestrateripoff 

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Posted 11 November 2009 - 03:12 PM

2010 is going to be very interesting.

Can't wait to see how they try and paper over the cracks again.

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Posted 11 November 2009 - 03:16 PM

View Postinterestrateripoff, on 11 November 2009 - 03:12 PM, said:

2010 is going to be very interesting.

Can't wait to see how they try and paper over the cracks again.


No. I can guarantee you it's NOT going to be interesting.

I'm running out of space in the garden to plant flowers, I've decorated already, work has now collapsed and I guess I'll end up pulling rice out of fields, which . . . is NOT interesting.

#5 User is offline   The Masked Tulip 

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Posted 11 November 2009 - 03:51 PM

Shouldn't you have waited for Realistbear to start this thread? Naughty, naughty!

I could not sleep last night and ended up listening to a talk about this on the Beeb. The US journalist said people are still handing back the keys because people are still losing their jobs... and people are not buying because they think that things will fall further or they do not have a job anyhow...
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The people closest to you have been trying to tell you that you have made a difference. That you did change things for the better. The Universe is vast and we are so small. There is really only one thing that we can ever truly control - whether we are good or evil.


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