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Housing Crisis

Bad Signs for Sales?

Will 2016 be remembered as the peak of the recovery?  It was the best year for sales in more than a decade.  Will sales take a break in 2017, a victim of political uncertainty, rising rates and prices that are outpacing incomes? Even worse, will 2017 herald a multi-year downtrend in sales? Last year, existing-home sales finished 2016 at 5.45 … Read More »

Why Foreclosures are Never-ending Credit Nightmares

The popular belief that the seven million Americans who lost their homes to foreclosure during the Housing Crash are healed, whole and forgiven of their debts after seven years have passed is only partly true. For foreclosures, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac set a seven-year waiting period before defaulters can apply for a mortgage, measured from the completion date of … Read More »

Summer Ends with Crippling Inventory Shortages

August brought even worse news for first-time and move-up buyer as chronic inventory shortages grow even, inflating home prices even more.  A double whammy of unaffordable prices and shrinking selections of homes for sale continue to handcuff the housing recovery. “Hopes of a meaningful sales breakthrough as a result of this summer’s historically low mortgage rates failed to materialize because … Read More »

Rental Cost Crisis Worsens as Ownership Improves

The percentage of renters paying more than 30 percent of their income on housing costs is increasing while cost-burned homeowners are decreasing, according to the 2014 State of the Nation’s Housing report released yesterday by the Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies. On the owner side, the number of households facing cost burdens has fallen steadily as high foreclosure rates … Read More »

Americans Want Action on Affordability

A new national survey of consumers commissioned by the MacArthur Foundation uncovers the depth of concern over America’s crisis in housing affordability, provides provocative insights into how a large number of Americans perceive the housing economy and outlines support for public policy solutions. The study found that eight out of ten Americans (81%) believe that housing affordability is a problem … Read More »

Freddie: Low Income Levels Slow the Recovery

Many of the nation’s housing markets are getting back to normal heading into the spring home buying season but many are not, according to Freddie Mac’s latest Multi-Indicator Market Index. Large pockets of weakness linger, particularly in the Great Lakes Region and the South outside of Florida and Texas. The national MiMi value stands at 82.7, indicating a housing market … Read More »

Boomerang Buyers are Back Big Time

Nearly half of all homeowners who lost their homes to foreclosure during the housing bust own their own homes again and most have a mortgage. just nine years after home prices bottomed in 2007. A new report from the Urban Institute that compares credit profiles of renters and owners found nine million (7.1 percent) of all adult consumers with a … Read More »

New Vs Old—Who’s Responsible for the Inventory Shortage?

  Who’s responsible for the inventory shortage? Does the blame lay with owners of existing homes are aren’t motivated enough to sell or with builders who simply building enough to meet demand? As the days count down to the opening of the spring sales season, inventories are lagging behind last year—which lagged behind 2014.  The result has been upward pressure … Read More »

Inventory Update: Pre-season Inventories Get Scary

As the build-up to the spring buying season winds down in a matter of weeks, the inventory picture is shaping up be significantly worse than it was last year—which was one of the tightest in recent years.  A rush of new listings in February and March could brighten the picture, but through January it’s clear that inventories are going starting … Read More »

Mortgage Credit: The Private/Public Paradox

Next September, two months before the Presidential election, America celebrates eight years since the Treasury Department took over Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and turned them into wholly owned subsidiaries. Since then the federal government’s control over the nation’s housing markets has grown even greater than ever. While we’ve been waiting for policymakers to fix a broken system of housing, … Read More »

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