Market Updates
Occasional overviews of local real estate markets.
Economists Say Housing at Bottom
Beacon Economics analyzed home affordability and came away feeling optimistic.
Beacon Economics founding principal Christopher Thornberg, whose firm advises a variety of business clients, says the high level of affordability is likely to drive demand and reduce the stock of excess inventory, ultimately resulting in the need for new housing, a rise in prices, and a pickup in new construction.
“While prices may fluctuate modestly over the next several months, we believe the worst of the housing crisis is behind us,” says Beacon Economics Research Manager Jordan G. Levine. “We expect prices to stabilize around current levels and likely be higher in the next 12 months.”
Source: Beacon Economics (10/11/2010)
Record-Low Rates Not Swaying Some Households
Mortgage rates are at record lows, but these rates aren’t motivating home buyers in huge numbers, nor are they successfully driving homeowners to remodel or take out money for other kinds of spending.
In previous recessions, lowering interest rates has driven the economy upward. What’s different this time around?
Mark Zandi, chief economist for Moody’s Analytics, points out that homeowners are wary. Two-thirds of any money saved is going toward paying down debt or building savings. Only a third is being spent.
“It’s going to take about three years to get back to normal,” says Patrick Newport, U.S. economist for IHS Global Insight.
Source: USA Today, Paul Wiseman, Stephanie Armour (09/29/2010)
Foreclosure, REO Home Prices Rise
Average sale prices for homes in foreclosure and those owned by banks rose 1.6 percent in the second quarter compared to the first quarter and 6.1 percent year over year, according to RealtyTrac, a foreclosure marketing service.
The average price of these homes in the second quarter was $174,198 nationwide, but was significantly higher in California where the average price, according to RealtyTrac, was $256,833. These prices reflected homes sold by lenders or by homeowners who had received at least one notice of default.
About 24 percent of all properties sold in the second quarter were REOs and foreclosures. Their prices were on average 26 percent lower than those of homes not in foreclosure, RealtyTrac reported.
RealtyTrac Senior Vice President Rick Sharga projected that it would be the end of 2013 before the housing marked works its way through the foreclosure inventory.
Source: Los Angeles Times, Alejandro Lazo and Daily Finance, Hugh Collins (09/30/2010)
70 Percent Say Buying Now is Good
A survey by Fannie Mae shows that 70 percent of Americans believe it is a good time to buy a home.
That is up from 64 percent in January 2010.
Still, 33 percent–up from 30 percent in January–say they’ll rent next time around.
About 67 percent believe housing is a safe investment, down from 83 percent of people questioned in a similar survey in 2003.
Source: Reuters News (09/16/2010)
Price Drops in Arlington VA
Showing properties
1 - 5 of 10.
See more Arlington Price Drops.
(all data current as of
5/23/2012)
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$254,000 : 3650 Glebe Rd S #349, Arlington0 beds, 1 full bath
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$949,000 : 2622 Upland St, Arlington4 beds, 3 full baths
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$299,000 : 1001 Randolph St N #1009, Arlington1 bed, 1 full bath
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$224,900 : 1300 Army Navy Dr #327, Arlington1 bed, 1 full bath
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$299,999 : 1021 Garfield St N #B35, Arlington0 beds, 1 full bath
Listing information deemed reliable but not guaranteed. Read full disclaimer.
HUD: Communities Get First Look at Properties

State and local governments and nonprofit organizations will get a jump on investors as part of a new program announced Wednesday by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan.
The National First Look Program is a partnership between lenders and communities to encourage neighborhood stabilization by giving public entities and community organizations the right of first refusal on properties that are likely candidates for renovation as affordable housing or targets for demolition to make way for new low-cost housing.
“This agreement helps us level the playing field to give communities a better chance to stabilize these neighborhoods,” Donovan says.
The First Look opportunity will last five to 12 business days. After that the financial institution will sell the home on the open market. Participating lenders represent 75 percent of the mortgage service companies, including Bank of America and Wells Fargo.
Source: U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (09/01/2010)
photo credit: Vagabond Shutterbug
Housing Less Likely to Be Wealth Builder
The housing market may stabilize, but some economists believe that real estate will never again be the investment it once was.
Stan Humphries, chief economist for Zillow.com, predicts that in the future housing values will only keep up with inflation. “All those theories advanced during the boom about why housing is special — that more people are choosing to spend more on housing, that more people are moving to the coasts, that we were running out of usable land — didn’t hold up.”
Dean Baker, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, says it will take 20 years for the market to recover the $6 trillion lost since 2005 and values will never catch up.
Bob Walters, chief economist of the online mortgage firm Quicken, is more optimistic. “You have to live somewhere,” he says. “In three or four years, people will resume a normal course, and home values will continue to increase.”
Source: The New York Times, David Streitfeld (08/22/2010)






