The housing market is showing plenty of strength, from sales and price increases to a decrease in foreclosures.
“There are almost no housing market indicators showing weakness,” says Mark J. Perry, a professor of economics at the University of Michigan-Flint.
Among the recent bright spots:
- Existing-home sales jumped more than 9 percent in 2012, the highest level in five years.
- New-home construction reached a 54-month high in December 2012.
- The delinquency and foreclosure rate is at its lowest level in four years.
- A home remodeling index reached 55 in the first quarter of the 2012, the highest reading since 2004 (readings above 50 indicate a growth in remodeling activity).
The housing market faces challenges, such as the number of home owners still facing negative equity, inventories of for-sale homes remaining constrained, and mortgage credit remaining tight and preventing some buyers from qualifying for a loan.
“At this pace, ‘normal’ is still two or three years away,” says Jed Kolko, Trulia chief economist.
Source: “The Housing Market’s Long-term Silver Lining,” MarketWatch (Jan. 25, 2013)
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