Home prices heading for triple-dip
NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- The besieged housing market has even
further to fall before home prices really hit rock bottom.
According to Fiserv (FISV), a financial
analytics company, home values are expected to fall
another 3.6% by next June, pushing them to a new low of
35% below the peak reached in early 2006 and marking a
triple dip in prices.
Several factors will be working against the housing market
in the upcoming months, including an increase in foreclosure
activity and sustained high unemployment, explained
David Stiff, Fiserv's chief economist.
Should home values meet Fiserv's expectations, it would make
it the third (and lowest) trough for home prices since the
housing bubble burst.
The first post-bubble bottom was hit in 2009,
when prices fell to 31% below peak. The
First-Time Homebuyer
Credit helped perk prices up by mid-2010,
but by the time the credit expired, prices fell
again.
In the second dip, which was reached last
winter, prices were down
33%before staging a mild rally that was
artificially spurred as banks slowed the processing of
foreclosures following the robo-signing scandal, which found
that loan servicers were rapidly signing foreclosures
without properly vetting them.
Now that the scandal is mostly resolved, lenders are
speeding more cases through the foreclosure pipeline and back
onto the market, weighing on home prices even further.
Earlier this month, RealtyTrac reported the
first quarterly increase in foreclosure filings in three
quarters. Even more discouraging: new default notices were
up 14%.
There's also a "shadow inventory" of homes in foreclosure
that have yet to go back onto the market.
The specter that those foreclosed homes could flood the
market at any time and drive prices significantly lower is a
huge concern, said Mark Dotzour, an economist for Texas A&M
University. "That's the elephant in the room," he said,
noting that there are 6 million home currently in shadow
inventory.
Biggest losers
Many of the regions that will be hardest hit were already
beaten up during the previous two dips.
Naples, Fla., for example, is expected to take the biggest
hit of any metro area, a price drop of another 18.9% by the end
of next June, according to Fiserv. Home prices in the area have
already fallen 61% from the peak.
Other cities expected to be hit hard include the
not-so-lucky Las Vegas, which is expected to see home prices
fall another 15.9% for a total loss of 66%; Riverside, Calif.,
is projected to fall another 14.8% (for a total decline of
61%); Miami is expected to decline by 13.2% (total loss: 57%),
and Salinas, Calif. could drop by another 13% (for a total loss
of 66%).
There will be some winners, however, led by Madera, Calif.
and Carson City, Nev., which will each gain 15.5%. That's some
consolation for hard-hit residents: The average home ineach of
these metro areas has lost more than half its value.
Other metro areas Fiserv expects to recover nicely are Yuma,
Ariz. (up 9.5%), Yuba City, Calif. (9.2%) and Farmington, N.M.
(8.3%).
Slow recovery ahead
Even if the housing market begins its comeback in
mid-2012, the recovery is predicted to be modest at best.
Nationwide, Fiserv is projecting that home prices will climb
just 2.4% between June 2012 and June 2013.
A few individual metro areas will do better, with 31 of the
385 markets Fiserv monitors expected to pile up double-digit
gains. Another 71 markets are expected to post increases of 5%
or better.
Many of the markets that will record the biggest increases
are vacation or retirement communities that had taken some of
the biggest hits during the bust.
The biggest "winner" will be Ocala, Fla., with a 22.4% spike
for the 12 months ending June 30, 2013. Ocala was one of the
hardest hit communities in the U.S. over the past several
years, with home prices falling some 50%.
Others anticipated gainers will be Napa, Calif., which
Fiserv projects will improve by 20.9% over that same period;
Panama City, Fla. (an estimated 18.2% jump) and Bremerton,
Wash. and Carson City, Nev. (both expected to see home prices
climb 17.9%).
Some cities will continue to fade, however.
Fort Lauderdale,
Fla.'s forecast is for a 9.2% drop through
next June and another 6.7% the 12 months after that. Its
neighbor, Miami, will endure 13.5% and 5.2%
declines, respectively.
For help and full relief from these problems, contact
www.RealEstateRelief.org
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