Posts Tagged ‘financial’
New home sales did better than expected in March.
But they still fell by 0.6% last month.
Median home-sale prices in March were around $7,000 higher than in February.
But they are still far lower than they were a year ago.
Some banks have started returning bailout money amid reports of better than expected profits in the first quarter of 2009, and the stock market has rebounded since early March.
But, the value of the Dow Jones Industrial Average is still at around 60% of what is was a year ago.
Consumer confidence is rising, and consumer spending rose 2.2% in the first quarter which is the most in two years.
But businesses cut spending on equipment and software by 33.8% in the first quarter.
The administration claims that 2,000 new transportation projects have already been approved under the stimulus package.
But the construction sector lost 626,000 jobs between December 2008 and March 2009.
And whilst we’d truly love to believe that the economic crisis has bottomed out, the IMF (International Monetary Fund) estimates that the global economy will contract by 1.3% in 2009 and the U.S. economy by 2.8% which would be the most since 1946.
According to a just released Census Bureau report, a record number of 19.1 million homes stood empty during the first quarter of this year, and the number of vacant homes, which includes foreclosures, properties for sale and also vacation properties, jumped from a figure of 18.6 million the previous year.
The report lists a total of 4.2 million vacant homes for rent, and 4.9 million seasonal properties that were only used for a part of the year, and says that the number of people that own their own residences declined for the third straight quarter to 67.3%.
Foreclosures were included in a part of the Census Bureau, that also included vacation homes intended for year-round use, as well as homes that were unoccupied because they are under renovation, and there were 7.9 million such properties vacant in the first quarter, which is up from 7.5 million a year earlier.
What might seem odd however, is that the ‘percentage’ rate of all U.S. homes empty and for sale, known as the ‘vacancy rate’, actually fell to 2.7 percent in the first quarter, and the reason that it is thought to have fallen, is either because the number of homes on the market declined because they were sold, or because their owners gave up trying to market them, and according to National Association of Realtors, the inventory of homes on the market averaged 3.7 million in each of 2009′s first three months.
The world financial crisis, plus falling home prices seem to have pretty much destroyed homebuyer confidence, and the percentage of people who said they plan to buy a home in the next six months, dropped to a 26-year low in March, and the decline in real estate prices is expected to continue into 2010.
The Mortgage Bankers Association just announced that the share of mortgages in foreclosure rose to an all-time high of 3.3% in the fourth quarter, and added that delinquencies, or the percentage of home loans having payments which are thirty days or more overdue, increased to 7.88%, making it the highest number on record since 1972.