Last year closed on several positive notes when it came to the housing market, and a number of recently released reports suggest we could be seeing the market stabilizing and even gaining some momentum as we begin the New Year.
Noted housing economist Liz Ann Sonders of Charles Schwab said in a recent report that “we’re seeing a light at the end of the housing tunnel.” The senior vice president and chief investment strategist for the brokerage firm pointed out that the pending-home-sales index surged more than 7% last month to its best level since April 2010.
“At that point, housing was artificially supported by the homebuyer tax credit,” she said in her new economic forecast. “The last time pending sales were at the current level without government support was June 2007.” Adding to the optimism, Sonders said, was the fact that the latest construction spending report was well ahead of expectations with most of the gains in private housing.
Sonders isn’t alone in her estimation that real estate could be bottoming out. In a report released Monday, Clear Capital, a real estate valuations company, predicted that prices in the San Francisco-Oakland-Fremont metropolitan area will remain flat this year versus a 4.7 percent drop in 2011.
The firm said Silicon Valley should see a 1.6 percent increase in home prices, compared with a 2.5 percent drop last year. "This region overall is doing pretty well," Clear Capital research director Alex Villacorta told the San Jose Mercury News.
The positive signals add more evidence that the housing market overall is moving in the right direction as we begin 2012.
Of course, we’ll continue to face headwinds. While foreclosures declined sharply last year, the drop was in part due to legal and regulatory issues that prompted lenders to delay action on delinquent borrowers. That “shadow inventory” of distressed homes could come back on the market this year, although it’s doubtful we’ll return to 2010 levels again.
The jobs picture is improving, although there will be bumps along the road as we saw this week. Weekly unemployment claims spiked last week more than expected after companies let go of thousands of holiday hires.
And while predicting that the real estate market has bottomed, Schwab’s Liz Ann Sonders believes the recovery in housing will be a slow and gradual one, similar to how she sees the recovery in the overall economy playing out.
Nonetheless, the economic and housing news in recent months continues to trend higher and offer reason for encouragement that 2012 will truly be a “Happy New Year.”
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
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