Economy

If Homeownership Continues Falling, Investors will Own More Housing

MHProNews has learned from HousingWire the American homeownership rate fell from 69.2 percent in 2004 to 65.4 percent in the first quarter of this year, and Paul Diggle, a property economist with Capital Economics estimates that rate will decline to 64 percent by 2015, not seen since 1995. Diggle continues: …

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IBIS Sings a Brighter Tune for MH

In an apparent about-face from its statement a year ago that the manufactured housing industry is near death, IBISWorld now says, according to timesunion, while sales of MH are relatively weak compared to 1998, “improved income levels are expected to generate higher sales of manufactured homes in the five years …

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Builders’ Hopes Rise

The National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI) states builder confidence for newly built, single-family homes rose six points in July, the biggest monthly jump in nearly ten years, and at 35 points, the highest number since 2007. The survey gauges builders’ perceptions based on prospective buyers, …

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Q2 2012 has Few Economic Bright Spots

AnchorageDailyNews reports retail sales fell for the third consecutive month in June, the first time that has happened since the fall of 2008 at the height of the financial crisis. Sales of furnishings, appliances, garden and building supplies, and at department stores all declined, leading to an overall drop of …

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Home Purchase Still a Fantasy for Many

Noting the number of first-time home buyers has dropped 20 percent since 2009, the John Burns Real Estate Consulting firm tells Bloomberg’s BusinessWeek home ownership for 25 to 34 year-olds will continue to fall trough 2015. Staggering student loan debt—federal student loan debt has increased 360 percent since the beginning …

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MHARR to HUD: You’re Not Hitting the Nail on the Head

In its Washington Update, the Manufactured Housing Association for Regulatory Reform (MHARR) is seeking federal support for public and private chattel lending to expand capital, liquidity, and number of lenders for the low to moderate income manufactured home buying market. Noting it is not likely for any major policy change …

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Arizona: Slight Improvement in Housing Market

Arizona Daily Star says the median rice of homes in Tucson rose 11 percent from last June to $140,000, but was unchanged from May, according to the Tuscon Association of Realtors Multiple Listing Service. The number of days a house is on the market fell to 68 in June from …

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Buffett Hedges his Bets

Benzinga reports Warren Buffett has changed his tune from a year ago when he noted most everything in the economy was improving except residential housing, for which he now sees a demand in the rental market. He says although Europe is in worse shape now than six weeks ago he …

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Foreclosures Remain a Threat to Stabilizing Prices

NationalMortgageNews reports RealtyTrac says foreclosure activity dropped eight percent in Q2 2012 from a year ago. 608,235 foreclosure filings—default notice, auction sale notice, or bank repossession—were reported on U.S. properties Q2 2011, as compared to 558,310 for this year’s filing. MHProNews.com has learned while banks repossessed 40,000 fewer properties in …

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MHI Testifies at Dodd-Frank Hearing

Speaking for the Manufactured Housing Institute (MHI) at a hearing on the impact of Dodd-Frank mortgage requirements before the House Financial Services subcommittee on Financial Institutions and Consumer Credit Wed. July 11, Tom Hodges, General Counsel for Clayton Homes, suggested Congress create a secondary market for manufactured home buyers so …

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JPChase: Chasing Bulls?

Standard & Poor’s Case-Shiller Index showed slowing declines in home prices earlier in the year, and Zillow‘s survey of economists are expecting an 0.4% decline through this year, but JPChase analysts say the 4.8 million homes in the shadow inventory will drag prices down another two percent this year as …

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Housing Recovery: Are the Trades Ready?

HousingWire says a report by the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) reveals 40 percent of single-family homebuilders plan on hiring skilled workers within the next year, but 62 percent fear a shortage because so many have left the trades because of a lack of jobs. One study reports shortages …

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Could FHA Topple?

HousingWire says seriously delinquent mortgages insured by the Federal Housing Administration hit 713,104 in May, the highest since the beginning of the year, but 23 percent higher than May 2011, and more than double the seriously delinquent loans from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac—3.5 percent versus 9.4 percent for FHA. …

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Housing Index Nudging Up Slowly

The National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) states the NAHB/First American Improving Markets Index (IMI) shows four more markets are showing sustained and measured improvement than last month, bring the total to 84 for July. The IMI is based on monthly figures relating to employment growth, house price appreciation, and …

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Seniors Fare Better During Housing Crunch

Senior Housing News states although household net worth across all age groups fell 35 percent between 2005 and 2010, from $102,844 to $66,740, for 65+ homeowners the drop was only 13 percent, from $195,890 to $170,128. The 35-and-under households median net worth dropped from $8,528 to $5,402, a 37 percent …

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30-year FRM Keeps Falling

NationalMortgageNews reports Freddie Mac says ten out of the last eleven weeks the average fixed-rate 30-year mortgage (FRM) has set new lows, with the week just ending July 5 marking another one at 3.62 percent. The average 15-year FRM fell to 2.89 percent. The average five-year hybrid remained at 2.79 …

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Employment Figures not Expected to be Robust

Anchorage Daily News states weekly unemployment benefit applications fell 14,000 to a seasonally-adjusted 374,000 according to the U.S Dept. of Labor, the fewest in six weeks. While economists predict only 90,000 jobs were added last month, payroll provider ADP counts 176,000 jobs added in June. ADP only measures private sector …

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Rents on the Rise, Home Prices on the Fence

CNNMoney says Trulia reports rents in the U.S. rose an average of 5.4 percent June 2011 to this past June, as foreclosed former homeowners and would-be homebuyers turned away by lenders drive up demand. Asking prices on for sale homes only increased 0.3 percent for the same period. In metropolitan …

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Will the Job Market Rise to Fuel Housing Recovery?

HousingWire reports an article in The Hill notes with barely four months before the presidential election, the Obama administration has a lot riding on employment figures. With tepid manufacturing numbers in June, a slowdown in China’s economy, and the European debt crisis still festering, analysts anticipate the jobs report due …

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