by TJ_98370 » Wed Apr 25, 2007 2:35 pm
george
Glenn Crellin is the director of the Washington Center for Real Estate Research at Washington State University. I would say that he is reasonably objective. I can't find any obvious ties to where his livlihood is dependent on the health of the real estate industry. His views are a bit more bullish than mine though.
Here he is commenting on affordability of homes, referencing the Housing Affordability Index which states that the typical "middle income" family in King County has only 70% of the required income to qualify for a mortgage on a "mid-price" home.
"...Home prices only tell part of the story," Crellin said. "The real question regarding housing's future strength is whether households can afford the homes." The Housing Affordability Index, which uses median home prices, mortgage interest rates and family incomes as inputs, measures the degree to which a middle-income family can afford the mortgage payments on a typical home. The statewide index, after declining each quarter since late 2003, finally inched up in the fourth quarter to 87.0. This means the typical family had only 87 percent of the income required to qualify for a mortgage on a mid-price home. Individual county indexes were often well above or below this guideline, ranging from a very encouraging 193.9 in Adams County to a highly unaffordable 39.3 in San Juan County. Among urban areas, the most affordable was Benton County (Kennewick/Richland) at 180.9 while King County surprised no one with the least affordable measure (69.6)....