
This News Article Was Posted October 17, 2009 on the Washington
Post Foreclosures will peak by the end of next year and
unemployment will climb above 10 percent as the housing market and
U.S. economy grapple with the aftermath of the recession, the
Mortgage Bankers Association's chief economist said this week. Jay
Brinkmann's forecast, released Tuesday at the trade association's
annual convention and expo in San Diego, envisions a slowly growing
economy and improving housing market, with home price declines
abating and fixed mortgage interest rates remaining below 6
percent. But the strength of any rebound will hinge on whether
consumers -- many still concerned about job security -- will ramp
up spending, he said. "The recession is behind us, but the effects
of the recession will linger for some time in the form of higher
unemployment and lower levels of business investment and home
construction," he said. Brinkmann projects that economic activity
will slow again in the first half of next year but pick up in the
second half. That won't be enough to slow unemployment, which is
expected to peak at 10.2 percent by mid-2010 and not fall below 8
percent until late 2012. During a panel session on Monday, Freddie
Mac chief executive Charles Haldeman Jr. noted that the speed at
which businesses are rehiring is lagging. Unemployment is the main
reason homes are now being lost to foreclosure, as borrowers
struggle without income and lenders are left with fewer options for
reworking troubled loans. "I think it would be a real mistake for
the industry to take some of the glimmers of hope that some might
be pointing to in terms of housing prices and housing activity and
reduce our efforts," he said. Many lenders have issued a moratorium
on foreclosures, causing a drop in the number of discounted,
bank-owned properties hitting the market this year. But some
economists expect that a wave of foreclosed properties could hit
the market in 2010, dampening home prices again. Those delayed
bank-owned properties aside, rising unemployment will lead to a
growing number of foreclosures at least through the end of next
year, Brinkmann said. Foreclosures have helped power sales in many
ravaged markets, particularly in the West and Florida. "We still
see a concentration in the lower end of the market," Brinkmann
said. "The entry-level homes are in demand." Brinkmann forecasts
home resales will increase by about 11 percent over 2009 levels. He
sees sales of new homes, which bottomed out in the first quarter of
this year, climbing about 21 percent. The forecast calls for median
home prices for existing homes to decline in the next two quarters,
reaching $164,200 in the first quarter of next year. Mortgage
rates, meanwhile, will average about 5 percent through the end of
this year, then rise to 5.6 percent by the end of 2010. That should
help fuel a 12 percent increase in home mortgages next year, but
home refinancing will decline as mortgage rates edge higher, he
said. By Alex Veiga Associated Press Saturday, October 17, 2009
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