Thursday, November 19, 2009
Over 12% Of Mortgages 30 days Late. Second Housing Crash Coming
The U.S. housing market is sputtering again, adding to doubts about the vigor of the economic recovery.
Just a few months after housing showed signs of leveling off, bad weather and uncertainty over the extension of a home-buyer tax credit sent new-home starts in October tumbling 10.6% from the previous month. They fell to the lowest level since April, the Commerce Department said Wednesday. Starts of single-family houses fell 6.8%.
Industry consultant John Burns talks to reporter Nick Timiraos about where the market is headed and the significance of low mortgage rates, the home buyer tax credit and the FHA, which he calls the "new subprime."
Earlier this month, Congress expanded the tax credit and extended it through April, so building should improve. Still, the latest data portend poorly for the economy overall, and for fourth-quarter growth.
On Wednesday Pulte Homes Inc., the nation's largest home builder, warned investors of a grim outlook. "As we look out to 2010, we are expecting difficult conditions to continue," said chief executive Richard Dugas.
Meanwhile, more Americans who bought homes during the boom are falling into mortgage limbo. About 3.4% of U.S. households -- or about 1.9 million homeowners -- are 120 days or more overdue on their payments, but not yet in foreclosure, according to LPS Applied Analytics, a research firm in Denver. That is up from 1.5% a year earlier.
Many of these people are likely to lose their homes over the next few years. That means more bank-owned homes will hit a market already suffering from oversupply.
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ouch.....bend over Bernanke
ReplyDeleteDon't you mean bend over Homeowners?
ReplyDeletewell here comes the the alt-a and option- ARMageddon that will destroy the FhA and the middle class.
ReplyDelete9:39----Let's say Joe Snuffy is one of the homeowners. Joe bought a $300,000.00 house (McMansion).
ReplyDeleteJoe makes $10.00 an hour on a rather insecure job. His wife takes in sewing and washing and babysitting.
Didn't Joe "already" bend over just before he signed the mortgage? Where was his "ok, let's see---I make $10.00 an hour---ok, the mortgage payment is $3,000.00 a month---ok--YEAH!! I can do that!!!!