Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byJack Shawn Blake Modified over 9 years ago
1
U.S. Real Estate Market Conditions: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly Mid-Year Meetings The Counselors of Real Estate Seattle May 2010 Stan Humphries, PhD Chief Economist stan@zillow.com206.470.7127
2
2 Current Market Performance
3
3 Case-Shiller only includes homes that have sold at least twice (and excludes all new construction) Case-Shiller includes foreclosure re-sales even though these are substantially different than non-distressed sales. ZHVI looks at all home values, regardless of what has sold or not. ZHVI does not include foreclosure re-sales. The Zillow Home Value Index: Comparison with Case-Shiller Peak-to-Current Change ZHVI: -23% Case-Shiller: -28%
4
4 Home values in the United States Source: Zillow.com
5
5 Foreclosures in the United States Source: Zillow.com
6
6 Comparing the top metros Source: Zillow.com
7
7 Markets which have stopped falling – will it last? Source: Zillow.com
8
8 Markets which touched a bottom and then weakened Source: Zillow.com
9
9 Hard-hit markets where improvement has stalled Source: Zillow.com
10
10 Markets which were improving (or getting less bad) but have weakened Source: Zillow.com
11
11 A look at the magnitude of the housing recession Source: Zillow.com The magnitude and breadth of current housing recession is unprecedented in the post-Depression era
12
12 Phoenix foreclosures Source: Zillow.com
13
13 Las Vegas foreclosures Source: Zillow.com
14
14 Stockton foreclosures Source: Zillow.com
15
15 Continuing Challenges for Housing Market
16
16 America is flush with empty homes
17
17 Current inventory level of for-sale homes is very high We made some good progress reducing inventory levels last fall with tax credits Did not work as well this year April: Nearly twice as many homes added to market as were sold in month Inventory levels back to July 2009 levels Pent-up supply? 7% of homeowners (5.3 million) want to sell if they see signs of improvement
18
18 Lots of “shadow inventory” in the wings 7.3 million mortgages either in foreclosure or delinquent as of March 2010. Accounting for shadow inventory, there was 45% more supply than indicated in official NAR inventory numbers as of Sept 2009. This discrepancy is growing over time meaning that, while official inventory has been falling, real inventory is essentially unchanged. Source: Mortgage Bankers Association; First American/Corelogic
19
19 Negative equity among the largest metro markets Source: Zillow.com
20
20 Negative equity + unemployment = more foreclosures Negative equity can only be worked down by sales/foreclosures, price appreciation or paying down mortgage balances We don’t expect much price appreciation near- term Unemployment forecasted to remain above 8% through end of 2012 Result: 3+ years of high unemployment visited on homeowners who can’t easily sell or refinance their mortgages
21
21 Mortgage rates are currently helping the market We’d been expecting mortgage rates to be in the upper 5% range by end of year. Greece, Portugal, North Korea and complete lack of inflation pressure have helped keep interest rates low. When will mortgage rates rise? Source: Zillow.com; see real-time rates and historical charts at http://www.zillow.com/Mortgage_Rates/
22
22 Mortgages continue to reset and recast Source: Deutsche Bank Global Markets Research Alt-A resets and Option ARM recasts have been a concern Alt-A: Less worrisome now with low mortgage rate environment Option ARM: Default rates have already been high in this product so fewer that will have to recast
23
23 Home values will continue to fall until Q3 2010. A likely total peak-to-trough decline of 26-28%. Further declines driven by foreclosures (themselves driven by negative equity and unemployment), an already high supply of for-sale homes, high overall vacancy rates, pent- up supply, and weaker demand after the homebuyer tax credits lapse due to demand-shifting. Very anemic appreciation after bottom is reached; may not appreciate at all in real terms for next 3-5 years. Conclusions
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.