Seattle Bubble

News & discussion about real estate & the housing bubble in the Seattle area.

Seattle Bubble - News & discussion about real estate & the housing bubble in the Seattle area.

Entries Tagged as 'Reuters'

Boo-Hoo: Tighter Standards Help Kill Chances of Bubble Returning

By The Tim on June 25th, 2009 at 2:00 PM · 85 Comments

I’m starting to sense something of a theme in some recent news pieces about the housing market. Consider the following quotes from two recent articles (emphasis mine).

Reuters, June 22:

Two U.S. Democratic lawmakers want Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to relax recently tightened standards for mortgages on new condominiums, saying they could threaten the viability of some developments and slow the housing-market recovery, the Wall Street Journal said.

SeattlePI.com, June 25:

Are new appraisal rules holding back the nation’s real estate markets?

Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the National Association of Realtors, sure seems to think so.

“Lenders are using appraisers who may not be familiar with a neighborhood, or who compare traditional homes with distressed and discounted sales,” Yun said. “In the past month, stories of appraisal problems have been snowballing from across the country with many contracts falling through at the last moment. There is danger of a delayed housing market recovery and a further rise in foreclosures if the appraisal problems are not quickly corrected.”

What do you suppose folks like Laurence Yun mean when they use the phrase “housing market recovery”? Given the types of things they are objecting to, I’m inclined to conclude that what they really mean by “housing market recovery” is a return to the days of double-digit appreciation, frenzied buyers engaging in bidding wars and waiving inspections, and flippers snatching up pre-sales to turn a huge profit once construction completes.

Newsflash folks: It ain’t gonna happen.

You can cry all you want about the new tighter standards that are slowly but surely coming online in lending, appraisals, and other aspects of the home-buying process that were allowed to get wildly out of control during the bubble, but even without these new standards, we’re not likely to see a return of a real estate bubble in our lifetimes.

Too many people have been burned—and continue to be burned—by the rampant dangerous excesses of the housing bubble for things to just ramp right back up into an out-of-control mania again after just a few years of contraction.

Tighter regulation is just one of the necessary consequences of the housing bubble. Real estate professionals need to spend less time complaining and more time finding ways for their businesses to thrive within the framework of a housing market in which people buy reasonable homes, for a reasonable amount of money, as a place to live not a super-leveraged jackpot mega-investment.

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Radar Logic: Seattle Going Into the Red

By The Tim on February 20th, 2008 at 10:52 AM · 19 Comments

Uh-oh, looks like Seattle is starting to get some negative national attention. As in, coverage that isn’t saying “wow, look what a strong, resilient housing market,” but rather “looks like Seattle’s housing market is poised to fall.”

Seattle, wake up and smell the coffee, your housing prices may be falling faster than foam on a latte.

Seattle, whose job growth from such companies as Boeing Co, Microsoft Corp, Google Inc and Starbucks Corp, is seeing the strength of its housing market eroding, Jonathan Miller, Radar Logic director of research, said on Tuesday at the Reuters Housing Summit.

Seattle has ranked about the top of all the U.S. housing markets over the past few years, Miller said. Prices have appreciated at about 12 percent to 16 percent yearly.

This past summer, the appreciation rate fell to 9 percent. Today its stands at about 1.5 percent. Meanwhile, the inventory of unsold homes in that market climbed at 40 percent over the last year.

“You can really see a top market like Seattle, which has been consistently performing well, going into the red,” said Miller.

It’s nice to hear something about Seattle’s housing market in the national media that isn’t of the “real estate party in Washington” variety. It’s true, things really are slowing down here. Prices have been falling since the summer, and not just in the usual seasonal way.

If you’re interested in checking out Radar Logic’s data, head over to their website, where you can generate nifty graphs of home prices and transaction volumes so you can see for yourself what Mr. Miller is talking about.

(Ilaina Jonas, Reuters, 02.19.2008)

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