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Tag Archives: Home Prices

Bank Sales Weigh on Non-Distressed Home Values

With a groundswell of unpaid mortgages and home seizures adding to inventories of bank-owned properties for years, REO sales have commanded a bigger share of the market, weighing down the entire housing market. Getting these foreclosed homes off banks' books and back into the hands of responsible homeowners is an essential part of the housing sector's recovery. RealtyTrac reports that REOs sold during the first quarter carried an average markdown of 35 percent compared to the price of homes not in foreclosure.

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PMI Weighs Economic and Market Impacts on Home Price Trajectories

Home prices have gotten a little bit of a boost in recent months thanks to a seasonal uptick in market activity. Most analysts, expect further declines to characterize the later part of the year and possibly extend into next year, largely because of the huge supply of foreclosures on the market. Mortgage insurer PMI says there's a 50 to 60 percent chance that home prices at the national level will be lower in March 2013 than they were in March 2011. PMI has put a figure on the likelihood that home prices will continue to depreciate over the next two years.

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LPS Applied Analytics Introduces Home Price Index

The Applied Analytics division of Lender Processing Services, Inc. recently introduced the LPS Home Price Index (HPI). The LPS HPI shows historical price trends for residential properties in the United States, offering estimates of property values that underlie residential mortgage portfolios and securities. LPS says the new tool is a reliable way to estimate borrower stress, negative equity, and potential for default and loss.

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Home Prices Break Long Descent but Late-Year Declines Forecast

Data released by Clear Capital Friday show home prices at the national level posted their first quarterly gain in June after nine months of declines. The company says the 0.9 percent increase is an encouraging sign that the markets are capable of positive price growth despite continued economic and foreclosure pressures. But even with the second-quarter uptick, U.S. home prices lost 3.2 percent during the first half of 2011, and Clear Capital is forecasting another 2.4 percent drop for the second half of the year.

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CoreLogic Home Price Index Shows Second Straight Monthly Increase

Home prices in the U.S. rose in May, marking the second straight month of gains, according to CoreLogic. The company says national home prices, including distressed sales, increased 0.8 percent. CoreLogic asserts that the spring buying season has brought with it more demand for non-distressed properties, which has contributed to the short-term gains in prices. Some are holding out hope that the consistent upticks are evidence the five-year long decline in prices may be drawing to a close.

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Real Estate Veteran Reveals Five Trends to Watch in a Struggling Market

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Greg Rand, a 20-year real estate veteran and author of ""Crash Boom,"" recently divulged five new trends in the struggling housing market. The secret to making sure your real estate doesn't turn into a money pit, he says, is to watch these trends so you can predict where prices will rise and where they won't. Rand contends that no matter how the markets change, no matter which way the winds shift, people will always need a place to live - an ideal that's been true of America since the first log cabin.

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Industry Insiders Weigh in on Case-Shiller Uptick

The closely watched S&P/Case-Shiller index showed its strongest positive movement since last summer with the release of Tuesday's report. The analysts at Standard & Poor's described the news as a ""welcome shift from recent months."" While it may fuel cautious optimism that at least a short-range upward trend is already in the making, industry experts and market analysts put the latest numbers into context and share their views on what to expect in the months ahead.

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One in 10 NYC Mortgages Seriously Delinquent

One in 10 residential mortgages in New York City is more than 90 days delinquent or in foreclosure, according to an analysis conducted by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. The study also revealed that the ratio of New York City borrowers at least three months behind on their payments, but not in foreclosure, has improved from 5.4 percent in February 2010 to 3.8 percent as of March 2011. Mortgage performance statistics were also released for Long Island and Hudson Valley.

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Post Double Dip, Case-Shiller Index Edges Higher

One month after reporting its home price gauge had officially double dipped, Standard & Poor's says prices have inched up, in line with the expected seasonal boost that accompanies the spring buying season. The 20-city composite reading of the S&P/Case-Shiller index posted a 0.7 percent increase in April versus March. It's the first monthly gain in eight months, but the index remains 4.0 percent below April 2010. Looking at the monthly movement, even in the midst of the spring season, it wasn't all up and up. Six of the 20 metros showed new index lows in April.

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Homes at Low End of Market Remain Most Vulnerable to Price Drops

Tight credit conditions for first-time buyers and a foreclosure pipeline full of homes bought with subprime loans mean that house prices at the low end of the market will continue to fall at a faster rate than prices at the middle and high end, according to Capital Economics. The bulk of these low-end homes consists of distressed properties, which already carry steep discounts as lenders and investors try to capture a piece of the limited demand out there to get these homes off their books and back into the hands of responsible homeowners.

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