July 26, 2010 6:03 PM

Home Prices Likely to Keep Falling in Big Cities

By
CBSNews
(AP)  Thought the housing crisis was over? Not quite.

Despite four years of falling prices and recent signs that they were finally bottoming out, homes are expected to lose still more value in many metro areas over the next year.

Parts of the country already pummeled by the housing crisis, like Las Vegas, Phoenix and Miami, will be hit hardest. But even some places that have held up relatively well - including New York, Los Angeles and Washington, D.C. - will suffer, too.

That's the conclusion of economists who have been reducing their estimates for home prices as the outlook for the economic recovery has darkened. The number of homes for sale or headed for foreclosure is so high that they think prices will be even lower by next July.

Because housing is such an important engine of the economy, lower prices could dim the recovery. When home values fall and people have less equity, they tend to cut back on spending. And as prices decline, potential homebuyers stay on the sidelines, slowing sales even more.

Earlier this year, analysts said they thought home prices had finally reached their low point and were ready to start rising slowly in most areas of the country. Now, they think the actual bottom could be nearly a year away.

The average home price in the Standard & Poor's Case-Shiller index of 20 big U.S. cities is forecast to drop nearly 2 percent this year from a year earlier, according to the average estimate of more than 100 economists polled this month by MacroMarkets LLC.

That's more pessimistic than in May, when the consensus was for prices to be nearly flat. Other, more bearish analysts think prices will sink 10 percent or more.

Price drops of more than 10 percent are expected in the Phoenix, Miami and Las Vegas areas over the next year, according to Moody's Analytics. Those areas have already been scorched by 50 percent declines in home values.

Moody's predicts that other areas - New York, Los Angeles, San Diego, San Francisco, Denver, Detroit, Cleveland, Minneapolis, Tampa, Fla.; and Washington D.C. - will see declines of 2 to 8 percent by next July.

Many analysts expect home prices to rise for a few months because a tax credit offered to homebuyers through April increased demand. But the gains probably won't last. By this time next year, Moody's expects prices in 19 of the 20 cities to have fallen.

Why further price drops for already hard-hit areas, as well as in healthier markets like New York and Los Angeles?

There's already a glut of homes left in each area by the real estate bust, and more foreclosures are expected as Americans fall behind on mortgage payments. Foreclosures add to the supply of homes on the market, bringing down prices.

In Miami, nearly a quarter of mortgage borrowers have missed at least three months of mortgage payments or are already in foreclosure, according to Moody's. That's the highest level in the country. In four other Florida cities - Fort Lauderdale, Cape Coral, West Palm Beach and Naples - the proportion exceeds 15 percent. The same is true for Las Vegas.

On top of that, so-called short sales, which happen when lenders let homeowners sell their houses for less than what they owe on their mortgages, are rising. They can drive down the value of neighboring homes, too. In Sacramento., Calif., short sales made up about 26 percent of homes sold in June, up from about 17 percent a year earlier.

Contributing to the problem is an economy grappling with high unemployment, relatively flat pay and tightened credit, all working to limit the number of people buying homes.

It could be a decade before the average price nationally reaches the peak it hit four summers ago, says Celia Chen, chief housing economist at Moody's. Even when they do resume rising, prices may not outpace inflation.

The median price peaked at $230,300 in July 2006 before tumbling 28 percent to a low of $164,700 in January 2009, according to the National Association of Realtors. The median has since risen to $183,700.

Nationally, about 7.1 million homeowners - more than 13 percent of households with a mortgage - have either missed at least one payment or are in foreclosure, according to data provider Lender Processing Services Inc.

In some Sun Belt cities, investors armed with cash are gorging on deep discounts for some homes, yet the foreclosures keep coming. The local areas remain stuck with depressed economies and a glut of vacant and soon-to-be-vacant homes.

"Even when demand picks up, prices aren't likely to budge all that much," said Mark Vitner, senior economist with Wells Fargo Securities.

Moody's forecasts flat or only slightly lower prices over the next year in Atlanta, Chicago, Boston, Dallas and Portland, Ore. And Seattle and Charlotte, N.C., are expected to enjoy slight price increases. In those areas, the supply of foreclosed homes is smaller, and the local economies are faring better.

Sales of new homes jumped last month, but it still was the second-weakest month in the 47 years records have been kept, the Commerce Department said Monday. Sales for April and March were also revised downward.

Michael Gao, 31, a software engineer in Mountain View, Calif., is watching home listings but feels renting is the wiser option for now. He fears the economy will worsen and thinks the home market will suffer.

"It's really not looking good," Gao said. "If the housing market will dip, then why would you buy now?"

AP
Add a Comment See all 18 Comments
by MalloryDavis July 27, 2010 5:06 AM EDT
See what happens when you put a person in office that never held a real job? He may be intelligent, but he doesn't know anything about running a country...
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by bradkt1 July 27, 2010 3:27 AM EDT
I don't see a drop in housing prices in urban areas as a bad thing. It will make more homes affordable for middle class working people to get into home ownership.
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by RobAla July 27, 2010 12:34 AM EDT
Well, that looks like a strong economic recovery to me... huh? Well, would you believe the President saying that he sees 9% unemployment into 2012? What? Isn't this the economic recovery progressives wanted?

And today the President said that what our economy needs is tax increases. Yum, yum... can't wait for all that economic recovery we'll sees as the federal government confiscates more money from the American taxpayer. With businesses forking over more hard earned money to fund President Obama new Socialist Democracy, that should really put them in a strong position to hire more people - right?
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by tiredofeverything July 27, 2010 1:56 AM EDT
Works great for Canada, Sweden, Denmark, France...
by LIBERALS-lie July 27, 2010 12:23 AM EDT
But Obama said Change/Hope is just around the corner...the economy will rebound...he promised...TARP....stimulus bill...financial reform...
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by KeithDrippingSprings July 26, 2010 10:40 PM EDT
Any price drop further than the forty percent that has already happened will be because of Deflation. Most of the cost of a home is labor and material. After the market dropped 15% that was all the fat in most home pricing. Except for the Hummer crowd, but they deserve to get screwed in a house deal.

Other drivers of home prices are land price, regulations, and inspections. You do not want to give up regulations or inspections because of liability and safety issues. Land price is a function of location so if it is depressed it will only stay that way until building recovers. Any new building will be priced comparable to the prices before the crash. Wages were already under so much pressure that most building is being done with immigrant labor so labor cost can't go down more. The fuel cost have driven up the cost of goods so when the economy rebounds so will fuel prices.

The truth is that most blue collar workers can't afford a home. AT 15 dollars per hour they couldn't realistically qualify for a home that cost more than 60,000 after their down payment. When was the last time you saw a 60,000 dollar home? Forty years ago a blue collar worker could afford a home, What happened?
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by curse914 July 26, 2010 11:00 PM EDT
Infinite growth is a ponzi scheme on a finite planet. We have had 30 years of bubbles to keep the illusion that growth is happening in our nation. The Captains of Industry have looked outside our shores for "growth", and this is the result.
by thy-only_king July 26, 2010 7:56 PM EDT
daily Presidential Tracking Poll for Monday shows that 25% of the nation's voters Strongly Approve of the way that Barack Obama is performing his role as president. Forty-four percent (44%) Strongly Disapprove, giving Obama a Presidential Approval Index rating of -19

Most voters (58%) still favor repeal of the health care law passed earlier this year. By a 44%-28% margin, voters believe repeal of the health care law would be good for the economy.
Reply to this comment
by KeithDrippingSprings July 26, 2010 10:26 PM EDT
I guess 58% of the people have insurance.
by askagain July 26, 2010 10:33 PM EDT
A large majority of Americans have health insurance. So many people oppose the health care reforms because they fail to accomplish a major goal. That major goal is to make heakth insurance more affordable. That goal got lost in the health care reforms. Furthermore, many people do not want to increase the deficit or pay higher taxes for these reforms.
by thy-only_king July 26, 2010 7:37 PM EDT
Home Prices Likely to Keep Falling in Big Cities

Big cities is where Obama got his votes.
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by LIBERALS-lie July 27, 2010 12:24 AM EDT
they voted for him and now they lose their homes...
by stevador39 July 26, 2010 6:10 PM EDT
The economists keep predicting a recovery. The government keeps handing money and power to Wall Street and handing control of the economy to the Federal Reserve. The Iraq and Afghanistan Wars go on as though money were no problem. Unfortunately, all the indicators of economic fitness: housing, employment, and the GDP are going down, down, down. IMPEACH B.O. and hand his Wall Street criminals.
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by tryhonesty July 26, 2010 6:06 PM EDT
Idiot RepubliCON Bush Administration killed this economy for years to come!
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by stevador39 July 26, 2010 6:24 PM EDT
Hi Tryhonesty, you are RIGHT. Bush was a criminal and an idiot. However, tryhonesty Obama has continued and expanded Bush's war, his bailout policies, and failed to investigate the fraud and usury in the mortagage companies. Try a little honesty yourself, politics are not a team sport. Politics are the life and death of nations. And FYI, I'm a liberal who worked all of 2008 for Obama's election.
by SoCal_Gridlock July 26, 2010 8:31 PM EDT
It was the Clinton administration who decreed that everybody should be able to live the American dream of home ownership and to do so it was necessary for Fannie and Freddie to drastically relax their lending standards and forcing the competition to follow suit to stay competitive. Lots and lots of unintended consequences have been the result. As usual there is plenty of blame to go around, both Democrat and Republican parties and presidents going back into the '90's.
by get_down July 26, 2010 5:51 PM EDT
My better-half once mentioned maybe we should pay-off our mortgage and I explained the reason to her that "Honey, we should not". The reason is very simple, owning a house including paying home-insurance, monthly mortgage payment, yearly maintenance expenses and last but not the least county property tax and the latter keeps going up even the economy is going down. Basically I treat "my house" as rental property. I'd rather keep my assets aside just in case the pension and Social Security couldn't hold, then we can still survive with our own assets. Safe bets and I don't gamble. BTW - ?Nobody, from Mr. Obama to Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke to private economists, expects that anytime soon. And the government has mostly exhausted its realistic options for nudging the economy along faster. Even among Americans with secure jobs, confidence is fading.? Of course, since we STILL have that Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke who is not only incompetent, but also so clueless to the nth degree ? in office, I?m not surprised that our economy is doomed!
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