Tag Archives: waccabuc luxury homes

Home Prices Slump As France Staggers Into Recession | Waccabuc Real Estate

As the French economy slumps into the second recession in four years, fears are rising that the country’s property market is also set to plunge.

Real estate services provider CBRE monitors the French residential property market and says the country’s unstable economy could lead to a price drop for the country’s beleaguered home owners.

Property prices have fallen in most French regions in the past year and the current prediction doesn’t provide much home hope.

Analysts at the firm say the weak economic environment and the drop in consumer spending power will not help the ‘feeble start’ for property sales in 2013.

The report highlights the growth in unemployment as a major concern for the country, while adding the drop in agreed mortgages, fuelled by over-cautious banks, will also not help prices in the short term.

Mortgage approvals drop by a third

They add that the fall in new mortgages approved has seen a 32% plunge since 2011.

The CBRE report states: “While banks have tightened their mortgage lending criteria and are asking for higher deposits, the main reason for the fall in mortgages is because of the slump in demand from home buyers.”

To underline the precarious state of the housing market, the construction of new homes is also heading downwards.

In the first three months of this year, only 83,900 units were started – a drop of 11.2% from last year.

Though 2012 is described as ‘brutal’ for developers after a fairly good 2011 – when housing starts fell by 18% on the year before – no-one is predicting a bumper year for construction this year.

Also, the number of investors in French property is in rapid decline.

Investors move out

From 2009 to 2011, investors made up 60% of the buying market, this fell to less than half last year and the numbers are still falling.

One reason for this decline is that letting returns have fallen as taxes have risen, and investors have become wary of a potential limit being imposed on rent levels.

CBRE says that property prices are not expected to rise this year and will even fall in some markets – particularly in areas which have a large supply of unsold homes.

The government is supporting the construction industry by unveiling 20 measures to boost house building and to encourage energy saving improvements to homes.

However, any attempts at encouraging new builds will only help fuel the oversupply of unsold homes and a bid to help landlords convert vacant offices into homes is proving unpopular since the conversion costs are too high.

 

Home Prices Slump As France Staggers Into Recession – iExpats.

Home inventory rises sharply in April | Waccabuc NY Real Estate

Housing inventory rose significantly in April, easing a supply shortage that some experts say has constrained home sales.

Meanwhile, existing-home sales edged upwards in April. Still, sales remain hampered due to limited supply and tight credit, according to NAR.

Housing inventory rose 11.9 percent to 2.16 million homes in April, representing a 5.2-month supply of homes at the current rate of home sales. That’s up from 4.7 months in March. But inventory still remained 13.6 percent below a year ago, when there was a 6.6-month stock.

Existing-home sales ticked up 0.6 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.97 million in April from an upwardly revised 4.94 million in March, according to NAR. That put sales at their highest level since November 2009, when a tax credit stimulated purchases, NAR said.

“The robust housing market recovery is occurring in spite of tight access to credit and limited inventory. Without these frictions, existing-home sales easily would be well above the 5-million-unit pace,” said NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun. “Buyer traffic is 31 percent stronger than a year ago, but sales are running only about 10 percent higher.  It’s become quite clear that the only way to tame price growth to a manageable, healthy pace is higher levels of new-home construction.” Source: realtor.org.

 

 

Home inventory rises sharply in April | Inman News.

MYRTLE BEACH: Better real estate market means scattered tight inventories | Waccabuc Real Estate

There was a time not that long ago when Grand Strand Realtors were pleading for a lower inventory of foreclosures so sales of traditional homes could pick up.

That’s happened, as remains clear in the April real estate activity report by SiteTech Systems.

But behind the numbers, another potential problem could be lurking: low inventory.

The new low inventory, though, involves the number of traditionally-marketed homes for sale and available lots to put them on. While it’s not a crisis and no one’s saying it’s going to get that way, a tightening of available properties to sell to eager buyers could raise prices which, at some point, could suppress demand.

“The inventory is being pressured in all segments on the south end,” said Lee Hewitt, broker in charge at Garden City Realty.

Hewitt said he believes buyers will accept some price increases, but he’s not sure how much is too much that will cause them to put their money back in the bank.

“It’s going to be interesting how it plays out in the next three, four, five months,” he said.

It’s not just the Murrells Inlet area that is seeing a shrinking inventory, said Todd Woodard, SiteTech’s owner.

Inventories are tight in the Carolina Forest and Forestbrook/Socastee areas as well.

The situation has gotten serious enough, though, that it has prompted one Realtor to send an email seeking potential sellers.

Read more here: http://www.myrtlebeachonline.com/2013/05/21/3498105/better-real-estate-market-means.html#storylink=cpy

 

 

MYRTLE BEACH: Better real estate market means scattered tight inventories | Real Estate | MyrtleBeachOnline.com.

Time to take the measure of the recovery | Waccabuc Real Estate

Commentary: Many global indicators are at inflection points

Long-term rates fell this week to the lows of 2013, mortgages stickier than 10-year T-notes. Although long Treasurys made it to 1.85 percent, mortgages are still 3.75 percent or so — the mortgage market frightened to death that any loan it buys today will live until its 360th payment.

Trading everywhere has ceased for Passover, Good Friday, and Easter, but next week brings a flood of brand-new information for March, capped on Friday by employment data. Thus a good time to reflect.

I do not recall a moment in which so many economic elements at the same time have been at points of inflection. In the old days (five years ago) nothing much mattered except U.S. data. In global markets the world is more important than the U.S.

1. Rates are down because of Europe. Period. Euro elites are secure looking down their noses: “Cyprus is unique, the euro-zone will be fine, just a little austerity and economic reform ahead.” Au contraire… bank funding costs in March everywhere except Germany rose by 25 percent (who wants a haircut at shoulder-level?); French and Spanish 10-year yields are opening versus German; nobody is making fiscal progress, the combination of austerity and euro-shackles making recovery impossible. Yet everyone who has cried euro-failure “Wolf!” has been premature. Or wrong: maybe there is no wolf at all. Or, if the wolf finally does arrive, the bigger the shock.

2. The stock market set a new high yesterday, greeted by no exuberance. Usually a technical “breakout” like this is followed by a big run. Not. This new high is a half-inch above the same top in 1999 and 2007. Whee. And yet … stocks could really run and bring back the wealth effect.

3. That wealth effect may already be here. This morning’s news: personal incomes jumped 1.1 percent in February and spending with them, up 0.6 percent.

 

 

 

Time to take the measure of the recovery | Inman News.

China home prices up for 11th straight month in April-survey | Waccabuc Homes

BEIJING: Average home prices in China’s 100 biggest cities rose in April from the previous month, the eleventh straight month-on-month rise, a private survey showed on Thursday, raising the risk of further tightening steps despite recent government measures to crack down on speculation.

Average home prices in April climbed 1 percent from March to 10,098 yuan ($1,600) per square metre, said China Real Estate Index System (CREIS), a consultancy tied to China’s largest online property firm, Soufun Holdings.

 

 

http://articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com

Distressed Sales Declined to 21 Percent in March | Waccabuc NY Real Estate

The share of distressed properties on the market continued to decline. About 21 percent of REALTORS® reporting on their last sale in March sold distressed properties, compared to approximately 40 percent in March 2011. This is based on data from the March REALTORS® Confidence Index Survey.

Distressed sales are mostly sold for cash. Distressed sales accounted for 35 percent of cash sales compared to 21 percent of mortgage sales.

 

 

 

http://economistsoutlook.blogs.realtor.org/2013/05/03

Owens Corning optimistic about housing market | Waccabuc Real Estate

Mike Thaman of Owens Corning says the housing downturn of 2007-2011 was the worst in U.S. history.

But the Toledo company’s chairman and chief executive officer says that if the housing market continues to improve like it has been, it could be enough to power the American economy for the next three or four years.

As the No. 1 Fiberglas insulation producer in the country and No. 2 seller of roofing materials, OC has been in a rare unique position to observe the fall of the housing market and its subsequent recovery.

Mr. Thaman discussed his “Thoughts on Housing Recovery” on Monday in downtown Toledo during a meeting of the Rotary Club of Toledo.

He said, “Owens Corning believes that the uptick seen in housing in the last six months is real.

According to industry projections, housing starts could rise from 600,000 to 1.5 million housing starts in 2015.