Is the real estate market showing signs of improvements?
Is the Real Estate Market Improving?
- By wanda mooney
- Posted
Is the real estate market showing signs of improvements?
There is a new antique shop open in Shelburne Falls. Located next to the Coldwell Banker Upton-Massamont Realtor's office on Bridge Street is the Trolley Stop Antiques and Collectibles. It has all kinds of collectibles and neat things to look at and purchase! If you like browsing antique shops, stop by and visit the Trolley Shop Antiques and Collectibles. Robert Fisher, the owner would love to see you.
It's safe to assume that many Americans harbored the same uncertainty during the George H. W. Bush administration in the early 1990s when the national homeownership rate fell from its previous historic high of 64.4 percent in 1980 to a low of 64.1 percent in 1991.
In the 1960s Lyndon Johnson illustrated a correlation between homeownership and accountability by stating "owning a home can increase responsibility and stake out a man's place in his community...The man who owns a home has something to be proud of and reason to protect and preserve it."
This statement is still true more than 50 years later. There are many reasons to take pride in homeownership such as:
Equity building is a beneficial trend that's becoming more and more popular with fiscally responsible homeowners. Also, home equity is the largest single source of household wealth for most Americans.
Furthermore, when the uncertainty surrounding the housing market fades and the market rebounds, homeownership may in fact transform that pride to profit through a home sale.
Jonathan Slappey is a writer for Quicken Loans, a company whose clients believe it's Engineered to Amaze. Interested in being Amazed by us? Read trusted reviews at our review site.
NAR released its pending home sales index figure last week, and for the second month in a row, the index is up. What's more, the index has broken 100. That's significant because the only other time the index has hit 100 in recent years is when the home buyer tax credit was available. "It is the natural, organic power of great affordability conditions and job creation that is bringing the index level up," says NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun. "This is a very encouraging sign." NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun is upbeat about 2012 because in a number of areas indicators are pointing upward. Not only are home sales up but housing starts are up and home prices are stabilizing in many markets and heading up in some. In areas where they're still down, the declines aren't that great. More fundamentally, broader U.S. economic signs are looking positive, including the all-important jobs picture. About 100,000 job are being created a month, and that could rise to 150,000--still not a quick enough pace to get us back to where we were before the downturn but the headwinds are in the right direction.
Released yesterday, December 29th, 2011, is the 2012 Economic and Housing Outlook from NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun. The full 15 slide PowerPoint looks at economic indicators such as existing home sales, new home sales, housing starts, GDP, payroll jobs and more.
Economic Report