WRA
Properties, Inc. Real Estate Outlook: Buyers Take
Note
One of the country's top housing economists has come
out with a new forecast and timeline for the market over the coming months -
and it's got some great insights for anybody interested in real estate.
Dr. David Seiders,
chief economist for the National Association of Home Builders, says that
housing starts are now down by about 20 percent from levels a year ago - but
that should be no surprise.
After all, he says, after years of record
housing production, the market had to cool off,
"We are in the midst of an inevitable adjustment following boom years when
housing market activity soared to unsustainable levels. The market that emerges
from the current correction will display good balance between supply and
demand, and move to a sustainable trend based on solid underlying
fundamentals."
How soon might the turnaround begin? Well,
nobody can answer that for certain, but based on his research, Dr. Seiders believes that the end of the down cycle may only be
a matter of months away - sometime next spring is a real possibility in many
areas.
In the meantime, Dr. Seiders
sees an upside for consumers: If you've done your homework on your local market
- and you know what's sitting unsold at what price and on what size lot - this
may be a very opportune time to get off the sidelines and start making offers.
One important reason why: Dr. Seiders points out that the vast majority of local markets
around the country have solid underlying economic fundamentals: Housing may be
soft, but - jobs are growing. Household incomes are moving up - and inflation
is under control.
Unlike some earlier cyclical downturns, such
as the early 1990s recession years, the correction this time around is likely
to be relatively brief and not so deep - as long as mortgage rates stay where
they are, about a point above historic lows. Corrections could be deeper and
longer in those markets where prices got most out of sync with local incomes,
but even the majority of those metropolitan areas on the West and East coasts
have relatively strong employment bases this time around.
Which raises a very basic question in my
mind: When just about every economist in the country is telling us that - we're
in a buyer's market, but that the down cycle may not last all that long - isn't
this a smart time to be actively involved in real estate, searching for deals?
Written
by Kenneth Harney