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Tag Archives: Census Bureau

Homeownership Rate Likely to Continue Falling: Capital Economics

For the first quarter of 2012, the Census Bureau reported the homeownership rate dropped to 65.4 percent, which was a yearly (66.4 percent) and quarterly drop (66.0 percent). Even more significant was the fact that rate had never seen such a low since the first quarter of 1997 when the rate was also 65.4 percent. In a report, Paul Diggle of Capital Economics wrote, ""it's plausible that tight credit, subdued confidence and many more foreclosures will drive the homeownership rate down to 64%.""

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Case-Shiller: Home Prices Up after 7 Straight Monthly Drops

The Case-Shiller Home Price Indexes rose for the first time in eight months in April, Standard & Poor's reported Tuesday The 10- and 20-city indexes each rose 1.3 percent, to the highest levels this year. Year-over-year, the 10-city index was down 2.2 percent and the 20-city index off 1.9 percent, both improving from March.

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May New Home Sales Hit Two-Year High

New home sales jumped to 369,000 in May - the highest level since April 2010 - as the median and average home prices both dropped, the Census Bureau and Department of Housing and Urban Development reported jointly Monday. Economists had expected sales to reach 350,000 from the prior month's 343,000.

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May Housing Permits At Highest Level Since 2008; Starts Drop

Housing permits soared in May to their highest level since September 2008, surging 7.9 percent to 780,000, the Census Bureau and Department of Housing and Urban Development reported jointly Tuesday but housing starts dropped 4.8 percent to 708,000 giving back all of April's gain. At the same time, permits for April were revised upward to 723,000 from the originally reported 715,000. April housing starts were also revised upward to 744,000 from the originally reported 717,000.

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Household Net Worth Plummeted After 2005, Alongside Income

The middle class seemed to take another drubbing Monday with news that U.S. median household net worth fell 35 percent between 2005 and 2010. Excluding home equity, the Census Bureau found that median household net worth ticked up by 8 percent during the financial crisis. Who got hit the hardest? Of the many age groups, heads of households from 35 to 44 accounted for nearly 60 percent of the decline in net worth during the five-year period. But they weren't alone: Median net worth also declined for all age groups between 2005 and 2010.

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CoreLogic: Nearly 4 Million Homes at Risk for Storm Surge Damage

CoreLogic's third annual Storm Surge Report, released Thursday, showed that just over four million homes in the United States are at risk of hurricane-driven storm surge damage. According to the report, there is $700 billion in total property exposure in the Gulf and Atlantic Coast regions, the areas most likely to face storm surge activity. The Gulf Coast houses just under 1.8 million homes at risk for potential storm-surge damage (totaling nearly $200 billion in exposure), while the Atlantic Coast has approximately 2.2 million homes at risk ($500 billion in exposure).

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April New Home Sales Up 3.3 Percent

New homes sales rose 3.3 percent in April to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 343,000, the Commerce Department and Department of Housing and Urban Development reported jointly Wednesday (May 23). Sales for March were revised upward from 328,000 to 332,000. Sales for March were revised upward from 328,000 to 332,000. Economists had expected the report to show a seasonally adjusted annualized rate of 335,000 for new home sales in April. New home sales in April were up 9.9 percent from April 2011, the seventh straight month of year-over-year increases.

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Housing Permits Drop, Starts Increase; Permits Hit 15-Month Low

Housing permits dipped in April for the first time in four months, the Census Bureau and Department of Housing and Urban Development reported jointly Wednesday but housing starts improved. Both indicators remained far above year-earlier levels. The month-over-month increase in starts in April appeared still larger because of a downward revision to March's report. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg expected permits to drop month-over-month and starts to increase.

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Homeownership Rate Falls to 15-Year Low

The nation’s homeownership rate (seasonally adjusted) dropped to 65.4 percent in the first quarter, its lowest level since the first quarter of 1997, the Census Bureau reported Monday. The homeownership rate fell in all four census regions in the first quarter – the steepest drop in the Northeast, 1.2 percentage points to 62.5 percent. The homeownership rate fell 0.8 percentage points in the South to 67.5 percent; 0.5 percentage points in the Midwest to 69.5 percent, and 0.2 percentage points in the West to 59.9 percent. At the same, the homeowner vacancy rate fell to 2.2 percent nationwide, down from 2.6 percent in the first quarter of 2011, and the rental vacancy rate dropped to 8.8 percent from 9.7 percent one year earlier.

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Steepest Drop in 13 Months for New Home Sales in March

New homes sales fell 7.1 percent in March to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 328,000, the steepest percentage decline since February 2011, the Commerce Department and Department of Housing and Urban Development reported jointly Tuesday. Sales for January were revised upward from 313,000 to 353,000. Economists had expected the report to show a seasonally adjusted annualized rate of 318,000 new home sales in March. New home sales in March were up 7.5 percent from March 2011.

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