Thursday, May 27, 2010

U.S. Household Numbers Fall



The number of American households dropped by an estimated 1.2 million between 2005 and 2008, even though the population increased by 3.4 million in 80 of the largest metropolitan areas during that time, according to a new study by a professor at the University of Southern California. While the analysis incorporates data only through 2008, the decline in household formation likely continued through 2009.

More young people are living with their parents instead of moving out, postponing the creation of their own households. Meanwhile, more families are combining households for economic reasons, including the loss of a home due to foreclosure.

The decline in the number of households contributed to the excess supply of apartments and single-family homes on the market. The housing and mortgage industries will feel the impact of this reduction in the number of households for years to come.  Also, the recession caused a five-fold increase in the rates of overcrowding, he said. A household that has more than one person per room indicates overcrowding.

The national homeownership rate has fallen to just above 67%, from above 69%. Renter household formation dropped even more than the formation of homeownership households.

Household formation should begin a return to a more normal level by 2012, as unemployment rates decline.

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Rural News Wire

Pickup Truck Stoled



Canaan, NH — Police said this ain’t the first time by a long shot a truck been stoled round these parts past few months.  In July, Doug Hensley had his half-ton dually took from the Hardee’s parking lot, even though he weren’t in there but for 15 minutes.

Natl report: The housing slump isn't over

Real estate prices could fall below the levels of April 2009. That was the lowest point since the peak in July 2006. 

Economist Patrick Newport forecasts prices will fall an additional 6 percent to 8 percent and bottom out in the third quarter of 2011. "Foreclosures have either peaked in the first quarter or are going to peak soon, but they will remain very high for several years."

Tax credits and historically low mortgage rates have failed to lift home prices so far this year. Prices fell 0.5 percent in March from February, according to the Standard & Poor's / Case-Shiller 20-city index released Tuesday. Prices in 13 of the 20 cities tracked by the index fell. Only six metro areas recorded price gains. One, Boston, came in flat.

In the first quarter of 2010, U.S. home prices fell 3.2 percent compared with the fourth quarter.

That marks six straight months of declines -- a sign that the housing market is going in reverse.
 
Weak job growth, tight credit and millions more foreclosures ahead will weigh on the home market.
Falling home prices tend to curtail consumer spending, and makes it harder for struggling borrowers to refinance into an affordable home loan.

The numbers are especially disturbing because they show that improved sales due to tax credits didn't translate into higher prices, said David M. Blitzer, Chairman of the S&P index committee.
 
Mortgage delinquencies reached a record high in the first quarter. More than 10 percent of homeowners with a mortgage missed at least one payment from January through March, the Mortgage Bankers Association said last week.

Since 2006, nearly 5 million homes have been lost to foreclosures or other distressed sales, according to Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Analytics. Zandi expects 3 million more to hit the market over the next two years.  Zandi noted that 15 million homeowners still owe more than their homes are worth. And 26 million Americans are either unemployed or underemployed. The underemployed include people who have given up looking for work and part-timers who would prefer to be working full time.

Monday, May 24, 2010

Organic Food Benefits Study Results

ROFLMFAO  ;-)

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) – Consumers who opt for organic foods often believe they are improving their health, but there is currently no strong evidence that organics bring nutrition-related health benefits, a new research review finds. 

A "disappointingly small" number of well-designed studies have looked at whether organic foods may have health benefits beyond their conventional counterparts', according to the review, by researchers with the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Health in the UK.

Moreover, they found, what studies have been done have largely focused on short-term effects of organic eating -- mainly antioxidant activity in the body -- rather than longer-term health outcomes. And most of the antioxidant studies failed to find differences between organic and conventional diets.

The review, published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, adds to findings reported last year by the same research team.

Thursday, May 20, 2010

DAMN, it's in the loop

NOAA: Current Offshore Surface Oil Trajectory Map  Click map to enlarge

NOAA's latest observations indicate that a small portion of the oil slick has reached the Loop Current in the form of light to very light sheens. NOAA noted that in the time it would take for oil to travel to the vicinity of the Florida Straits, any oil would be highly weathered and both the natural process of evaporation and the application of chemical dispersants would reduce the oil volume significantly.

NOAA spill specialists continue to advise the U.S. Coast Guard on cleanup options as well as advising all affected federal, state and local partners on sensitive marine resources at risk in this area of the Gulf of Mexico.

Admiral Mary Landry noted that weather has aided spill cleanup in recent days, allowing for several controlled burns and collection of fairly high concentrations of oil-water mix. Admiral Landry closed the press conference on an optimistic note. “If top kill works we will demob,” she says. “Let’s all cross our fingers and say our prayers.”

BP is preparing for a "top kill" (shooting mud down the well to halt the spill) operation next week.

Monday, May 17, 2010

GM Things Looking Better

General Motors Co. rode expense cuts from its bankruptcy and strong sales of redesigned models to its first quarterly net income in nearly three years, drawing the company closer to a stock offering that would repay at least part of its government aid.

The $865 million first-quarter profit is a dramatic reversal from the huge $6 billion loss in the same period last year.

New models such as the Chevrolet Equinox small sport utility vehicle and the Buick LaCrosse luxury sedan lifted GM's North American operations to a $1.2 billion profit, compared with a $3.4 billion loss in the year-earlier quarter.

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Ouch! Real Estate Continues to Pinch Natl News

Highflying property prices drove the most-recent economic boom, and a collapse in real-estate values hammered it back down. Now, as the economy struggles to regain strength, real estate is expected to continue to act as a brake, rather than an accelerator.

Despite clear signs of revival in the larger economy, including upturns in manufacturing and consumer spending, the nation's market for homes and office buildings remains mired in foreclosures and oversupply. That imbalance will be worked out over time, but in the meantime, it is slowing the recovery in myriad ways.

Here's how it breaks down:

Less construction means fewer jobs. Construction is a big employer and one of the better-paid sectors for men who lack a college degree. The sector has shed 2.1 million jobs from its peak in March 2007 to April 2010. The 5.6 million construction jobs that are left comprise 4% of U.S. jobs, down from 6% when employment peaked in December 2007.

With the glut of houses, offices and malls already pressuring the real-estate market, many of these jobs will not come back for a while, putting added pressure on unemployment even as growth resumes.

Indeed, construction spending is running 13% below its year-ago level and about 25% below the boom-year peak.

Home owners who once felt rich are feeling poorer. Throughout the boom, consumers used their home equity to borrow and spend as they watched housing prices soar. The ratio of dollars taken out of homes to total personal income—a gauge of how much consumers are pulling out of their homes relative to how much they make in wages and other income—fell the last three quarters of 2009. During the boom years, that ratio got as high as 9% nationwide, according to Moody's Analytics.

While real-estate prices have stabilized, they are unlikely to regain prerecession values for years. That has left many consumers with a pile of debt but not much home equity to be used for investment or spending, a big reason why economists believe recent gains in consumer spending aren't sustainable.

"The housing market, since it was the epicenter of the crisis, is also central to the feeble recovery," says Ethan Harris, an economist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch.

Small businesses aren't borrowing as much. While bigger companies can access the now-recovered market for bonds and other debt, many smaller companies—which are key job generators—use the value of their own property to secure bank loans. As the value of those holdings has fallen, so too has their ability to get loans, crimping investment and hiring at a time when the recovery is gaining steam.

Some 49% of small businesses own at least part of the commercial buildings in which they are located, and the majority of them have mortgages, according to the National Federation of Independent Business. But as real-estate values have fallen, so has this source of equity, limiting how much a bank can lend them.

U.S. nonfinancial companies had $6.3 trillion in real-estate assets at the end of 2009, down 33% from 2007, according to the Federal Reserve. That drop is a big reason why corporations' total net worth fell to $12.9 trillion from $15.9 trillion over the same period.

With the value of collateral so depressed "the ability for many small employers to borrow will be constrained precisely as sales begin to strengthen and new investments are warranted," wrote the National Federation of Independent Business in a recent report on small-business credit conditions.

Lower real-estate values translate into lower property taxes, crimping government spending. State and local governments employ 20 million police officers, teachers and other employees, roughly 15% of the work force and more than in all of manufacturing. But much of the money to provide services and pay employees comes from property taxes, which depend on property values. Even as the economy and job market recover, Local governments are cutting employees as they grapple with the worst budget deficits in a generation.

Property taxes continued to grow through the recession and recovery, in part because local governments calculate the levy based on property assessments that are often years old. Property taxes grew 5.7% to $170 billion in the last three months of 2009 versus the same period in 2008. That won't last as tax assessments catch up with reality.

In California, one of the first states into recession, Santa Barbara County saw its 2009 property taxes decline for the first time since 1978.

Property taxes "have only just begun to slump, meaning that cities and other localities will be contending with increasing budget pressure for the next several years," writes the Brookings Institution, a left-leaning Washington think-tank, in a recent report on local government.

Real estate itself is but a small share of the U.S. economy, but its tentacles are far-reaching.

Friday, May 7, 2010

Unemployable


One of every five men 25 to 54 isn't working.
Even more alarming, the jobs that many of these men, or those like them, once had in construction, factories and offices aren't coming back. "A good guess…is that when the economy recovers five years from now, one in six men who are 25 to 54 will not be working," Lawrence Summers, the president's economic adviser, said the other day.

Demand for workers who haven't much education -- which includes many men, particularly minority-group men -- is waning. A shrinking fraction of them are working. Some are looking for work; some have given up. Some are collecting disability benefits or an early-retirement pension. Some are just idle.

For 50 years, the fraction of men with jobs in what once were prime earning years has been trending down. Over the same decades, the share of women who work has been rising, a significant social change that lately has cushioned the blow of Dad's unemployment for many couples.

Women have suffered less in this recession. They were more likely to be in health care and other jobs that weren't hit as hard as construction and manufacturing. They are increasingly likely to have the education so often required to get or keep a good job these days.

That's good for their families. But will there be good-paying jobs in the future for prime-age men, particularly the ones who don't go to college?

Americans have worried for decades that the economy won't produce enough jobs. But the economy always provided. As farm jobs were eliminated by mechanization, factories hired more. As factories increased productivity and moved work offshore, more Americans got jobs in health care and other services. And the economists said to all those who had been worried about perennial, persistent unemployment: We told you so!

Yet nothing in the textbooks says that the supply and demand for workers will intersect at a wage that is socially acceptable. At the high end, demand for skilled workers and those who rely on their brains will return when the economy does. At the other end, jobs in restaurants, nursing homes and health clubs -- the jobs that are hard to automate or outsource -- will come back, too.

In the middle, there will be some jobs for workers without much education, for the plumbers, electricians and software technicians. But not enough to go around.

Men who in an earlier era would have been making good money on the assembly line are, and will be, working security or greeting at Wal-Mart, jobs that almost anyone can do and thus jobs that don't pay well.

If they're working at all. Today, 6.5 million workers have been out of work for six months or more, and that includes only those who are still looking for work. History suggests the longer they're unemployed, the less likely they are ever to work again. Faster economic growth would help a lot, but won't suffice.

One way to resist these market forces is to reduce the supply of workers who aren't in demand and increase the supply of workers who are. That is, educate more and better: Fix K-12 schools, improve worker-training programs, strengthen community colleges, give more aid to college students. All this is wise, but most of it will take a long time.

Thursday, May 6, 2010

Reader's Point Made

"Since quite a large portion of the Real Estate meltdown appears to be the fault of unscrupulous lenders flipping risky mortgages, might it be wrong to encourage legislation that would reattach mortgages to the banks that made them originally"?

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Fed: Low Rates Likely Through 2010


Interest rates are likely to remain low into 2011, Federal Reserve policymakers hinted in at least two presentations.

Fed Governor Daniel Tarullo said, "The relatively modest pace of recovery, the continued high rate of unemployment, subdued inflation trends, and well-anchored inflation expectations together suggest that the need for highly accommodative monetary policies will not diminish soon.”

Monday, May 3, 2010

Martha's Stats Flash

U.S. home sales in the first three months of this year increased 34 percent over the first quarter of 2009

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Will anyone ever want to live here again?


A dozen bouquets of flowers and a tiny figurine of an angel form a makeshift memorial to Brian Betts, a widely admired middle school principal who was shot to death in his suburban home recently.

The death has been ruled a homicide, and police are still searching for the killer. Meanwhile, some area residents grieving his death are also pondering a bizarre twist: Betts' cozy brick house was the scene of a separate 2002 murder of a man and his 9-year-old daughter.

The real estate agent who helped Betts buy his home in 2003, Therese Cox, told The Gazette, a Maryland newspaper, that Betts learned about the 2002 double murder from a neighbor after the purchase.

Rules about what real estate agents must disclose vary from state to state. Only two – Alaska and South Dakota – require that sellers inform all prospective buyers about a previous murder or suicide. Disclosure laws have become less relevant in the age of Google. In addition to scouring traditional real estate databases, it might be good to conduct a thorough Internet search on a property address as well.

Homes that have been the site of a horrific event such as a murder or suicide usually sell quickly, and a "haunted" property can even have added appeal, some sellers say. Real estate agents and prospective homebuyers across the USA say that's a common view. Stigmatized properties often sell at a discount, though a tragedy actually appeals to some buyers because it gives them a story to tell.

Saturday, May 1, 2010

More Keys Homes Selling for Less


The number of home sales in the Florida Keys have continued to increase in 2010, while prices continue to drop.

The average sales price (in the Keys) for the first quarter of 2010 was 14 percent lower than in the same three months of 2009, averaging $417,000. All Keys market areas had a minimum of 10 percent fewer properties for sale at the end of the first quarter of 2010, with Keys West declining by 22 percent to 1,091, down from 1,406 in 2009 and a peak of 1,588 in 2008.

The average sales price of both Key West homes and condominiums in the month of March alone showed gains over March 2009, indicating that the market in Key West is stabilizing faster than other areas of the Keys.

The Middle Keys had the greatest increase in the number of sales, nearly doubling in the first quarter of 2010 the number from the first quarter of 2009. The Middle Keys also had the smallest decline in average sales price at only 2 percent during the same time period.

The Lower Keys had the smallest gain in the number of sales in the first quarter of 2010 over 2009 at 6 percent, but it saw the largest decline in prices, dropping 25 percent.

The Keys also have experienced a notable decline in the number of listings and months of inventory. The first three months of 2009 showed about 4,500 properties for sale throughout the county, compared with 3,800 as of March 31, 2010. Months of inventory dropped from 46 months at this time last year to 28 months currently.