
Home prices fall 0.5 percent from February to March, raising
fears of a new bottom The housing slump isn't over. Tax credits
and historically low mortgage rates have failed to lift home prices
so far this year. Prices fell 0.5 percent in March from February,
according to the Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller 20-city index
released Tuesday. That marks six straight months of declines -- a
sign that the housing market is going in reverse. "It looks a
little like a double-dip already," economist Robert Shiller said in
an interview. "There is a very real possibility of some more
decline." The co-creator of the Case-Shiller index, who predicted
in 2005 that the housing bubble would burst, says he worries that
home prices rose last year only because of the federal tax credits.
That fear is shared by other economists. They note that weak job
growth, tight credit and millions more foreclosures ahead will
weigh on the home market. All that is discouraging for homeowners
who have seen the value of their largest asset deteriorate sharply
over the past three years. Falling home prices tend to curtail
consumer spending. And they make it harder for struggling borrowers
to refinance into an affordable home loan. Prices in 13 of the 20
cities tracked by the index fell. Only six metro areas recorded
price gains. One, Boston, came in flat. In the first quarter of
2010, U.S. home prices fell 3.2 percent compared with the fourth
quarter. The numbers are especially disturbing because they show
that improved sales due to the tax credits didn't translate into
higher prices, said David M. Blitzer, Chairman of the S&P index
committee. Still, falling home prices haven't kept many consumers
from maintaining their optimism about the economy. A separate
report Tuesday showed consumer confidence rose in May for the third
straight month as hopes for job growth improved. The increase in
the Conference Board's Consumer Confidence Index was boosted by
consumers' brighter outlook for the next six months. In a healthier
economy, extraordinarily low mortgage rates would pump up demand
for homes. But employers aren't creating new jobs fast enough and
loans are harder to come by for small businesses and individuals.
On Monday, the National Association of Realtors said sales of
previously occupied homes rose 7.6 percent in April. But the sales
were aided by the government incentives that have now expired.
Economists don't expect the improvements to last. New buyers were
offered a credit worth up to $8,000. Current owners who bought and
moved into another home could get a credit for up to $6,500. To
receive them, buyers had to have a signed offer by April 30 and
must close by the end of June. Shiller and other economists worry
that prices could fall below the levels of April 2009. That was the
lowest point since the peak in July 2006. IHS Global Insight
economist Patrick Newport forecasts prices will fall an additional
6 percent to 8 percent and bottom out in the third quarter of next
year. Newport said the glut of homes on the market is the main
reason. But he's also worried about the rate of foreclosures. "When
banks foreclose, they sell the properties at deep discounts,"
Newport said. "Foreclosures have either peaked in the first quarter
or are going to peak soon, but they will remain very high for
several years." Mortgage delinquencies reached a record high in the
first quarter. More than 10 percent of homeowners with a mortgage
missed at least one payment from January through March, the
Mortgage Bankers Association said last week. Since 2006, nearly 5
million homes have been lost to foreclosures or other distressed
sales, according to Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's
Analytics. Zandi expects 3 million more to hit the market over the
next two years. Zandi noted that 15 million homeowners still owe
more than their homes are worth. And 26 million Americans are
either unemployed or underemployed. The underemployed include
people who have given up looking for work and part-timers who would
prefer to be working full time. "It's a lethal mix," Zandi said.
Article Written by: J.W. Elphinstone, AP Real Estate Writer, On
Tuesday May 25, 2010, 4:44 pm EDT
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