Slumping sales may indicate recession
Housing market drops to lowest spot in years
Slumping home sales may indicate recession
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By Jeannine Aversa
Published: December 29, 2007
WASHINGTON — The housing market plunged deeper into despair last month, with sales of new homes plummeting to their lowest level in more than 12 years.
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‘The downturn is intensifying'
Over the past 12 months, new-home sales nationwide have tumbled by 34.4 percent, the biggest annual slide since early 1991, and stark evidence of the painful collapse in the once high-flying housing market.
"I think you can classify what we are seeing in the housing market as a crash,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Economy.com.
"Sales and home prices are in a free fall. The downturn is intensifying.”
The median sales price of a new home dipped to $239,100 in November. That is 0.4 percent lower than a year ago. The median price is where half sell for more and half for less.
Would-be home buyers have found it more difficult to secure financing, especially for "jumbo” mortgages — those exceeding $417,000. The tighter credit situation is deepening the housing slump. Unsold homes have piled up, which will force builders to cut back even more on construction and look for ways to sweeten the pot to lure prospective buyers.
"A lot of borrowers are being disqualified for loans. If you can't qualify for a mortgage the game is over. For those who do qualify, it takes longer to get loans,” said Brian Bethune, economist at Global Insight.
The housing market has been suffering through a severe slump after five years of record-breaking activity from 2001 through 2005. Sales turned weak as did home prices. The boom-to-bust situation has increased dangers to the economy as a whole and has been especially hard on some homeowners.
Foreclosures have soared to record highs and probably will keep rising. A drop in home prices left some people stuck with balances on their home mortgages that eclipsed the worth of their home. Other home buyers were clobbered as low introductory rates on their mortgages jumped to much higher rates, which they couldn't afford.
Problems in housing are expected to persist well into 2008 — a major election year.
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Culture and Lifestyle, Business, Real Estate, Real Estate Sales, House and Home, Property Values


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