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    Road Map to a Housing Rebound

    Fantasy Finance

    If you're a homeowner these days--and almost two thirds of Americans are--the housing market generally doesn't fall into the realm of pleasant dinner conversation.

    The once-booming industry has been bruised and bloodied from nearly every angle: Home prices have plunged 30 percent nationally over the past five years, millions of Americans have lost their homes to foreclosure, and millions more are on the brink with underwater mortgages. Still others are seriously delinquent on their home loans.

    Things are bad, maybe the worst they've ever been, but there's likely to be more pain before there are any real gains for the housing market, experts say, primarily because of the giant inventory of homes on the market and the certainty more will be coming through the pipeline over the next few years.

    Still, the U.S. economy is resilient. The recovery has absorbed a debt-ceiling fiasco at home, a near financial meltdown in Europe, and political chaos in the Middle East. The job market is also improving, consumers are spending more, and corporate balance sheets remain healthy, all of which are critical for the housing market to rebound.

    [See a slide show of 6 ways to fix the housing market.]

    The remaining puzzle piece is time and how much of it the housing market will need to recover. Here are some other hurdles the housing market needs to overcome before a rebound takes root:

    Job growth/broader economic gains. After a bumpy several months, the employment outlook has started to improve, with the private sector adding more than 200,000 jobs in November, according to payroll firm ADP. That's certainly good news, but we're not out of the woods yet. The national unemployment rate is still sky high at 9 percent and the pace of job growth needs to double before it translates into the broader economic growth needed to bolster a housing recovery.

    "The situation in the housing market is tightly bound with what's happening in the broader economy," says Stan Humphries, chief economist at Zillow. "A broader economic recovery is going to have to precede a recovery in housing. Really, job growth is so essential for housing demand."

    Particularly important is the unemployment rate among young Americans between 25 and 34 years old.

    "These are the people that are forming households and buying their first homes," says Jed Kolko, chief economist at Trulia. Due to the bad economy, more young Americans have been "doubling up," moving in with friends or living at home to ride out lean times. That's put the kibosh on demand, according to some, which is part of the reason why there's still so much housing inventory to work through.

    Clarity on foreclosure processes. A group of states has banded together to sue lenders and mortgage servicers over what they claim to be improper foreclosure practices. Awaiting rulings in those suits, lenders have held back on foreclosures, slowing the pace and increasing the backlog. The longer it takes to get clarity on how to proceed with foreclosures, the longer it will take to clear that inventory and the longer it will take for housing prices and the broader housing market to recover.

    [Pending Home Sales Surge.]

    Faster foreclosure processes. Getting homes that are likely to be foreclosed upon or homes that already are in foreclosure to the market is key to exposing the nation's shadow inventory, which has been keeping prices depressed around the country.

    "The longer this goes on, the longer the foreclosure inventory will perpetuate and the longer we'll be stuck in a rut," says Anthony Sanders, professor of real estate finance at George Mason University.

    The attorneys general investigation has slowed down the foreclosure process, lengthening the time it takes to get delinquent loans through the pipeline and on the market to be sold. But speeding up the foreclosure process is a double-edged sword. More foreclosures will further bloat the housing inventory, driving down prices even more.

    But that's to be expected, says Chris Flanagan, strategist at Bank of America. "The implications of what we're seeing is that you have to have prices go down before they go up," he says. "At a minimum, things need to make it through the pipeline. Having it sit there is a dead weight on the economy and it ultimately creates more downside potential because of the backlog."

    Reduced inventory. Next on the to-do list is to clear out the massive housing inventory the United States has. Especially with the influx of homes likely to come on to the market when foreclosure processes finally get ironed out, we're going to have a lot of stock to deal with. But reducing the supply of homes should help boost prices in the long run, and price appreciation is good for the housing market.

    "There really has to be a way to clear the excess inventory out there," Sanders says. "[Banks and servicers] know how to do it. It's called lower the price. The problem is they don't want to lower the price too much because they're very nervous about taking huge losses." Huge losses sometimes leave the taxpayer on the hook, making the entire issue intensely political, Sanders adds.

    [Huntsman: Shut Down Fannie and Freddie.]

    Other experts say the government has a different role, a role facilitating financing for government- and bank-owned properties. The Federal Housing Finance Agency has thrown around a couple of proposals for dealing with these assets, but nothing has been finalized.

    "It would help a lot to have some government-sponsored financing of these [properties]," Flanagan says. "It would help them in the end if they allowed more investors to come in."

    Converting foreclosures into sales would help stabilize neighborhoods and home values, Flanagan adds, and, in some cases, improve the availability of rental homes, a sector of the market that has seen an uptick in demand as the foreclosure crisis hit.

    Increasing rents. The completion of the cycle comes when rent increases to a point where it's more attractive to buy a home than to continue renting. With affordability at record levels, when the jobs market recovers and the economy finds its footing, more renters should turn into homeowners, which will reduce the supply of homes and help stabilize prices.

    mhandley@usnews.com

    Huntsman: Shut Down Fannie and Freddie.

    Pending Home Sales Surge.

    See a slide show of 6 ways to fix the housing market.



    More From US News & World Report

     

    1,130 comments

    • Paul R  •  5 months ago
      I don't see how corporate and bank losses are the taxpayers' problem. These industries are private sector and therefore should sink or swim based on their ability to deliver decent goods or services at a price that the market can bear, and nothing else. The housing market folded due to unethical and illegal activity on the part of the banks. This means that the people who perpetrated this should pay the price for it, both in fines and restitution as well as criminal proceedings. They don't deserve to be rewarded for failure with taxpayer funds.
      • Cashman7323 5 months ago
        Join the Tea Party. Return to the balance of power and checks and balances the founders intended. The best way to end crony capitalism and corruption is to take power away from politicians.
      • Paul R 5 months ago
        Based on this logic, the mafia should be bailed out with taxpayer funds when the Albanians move in on their territory. There is no difference.
      • Jim 5 months ago
        The housing market crashed because of guys like Barney Frank who forced the banks to give loans to people who did not qualify for them.
    • stardog  •  5 months ago
      The only way our country can recover,bring back manufacturing!
      • Anonymous 5 months ago
        You hit the nail with that one !!! I agree 100%
      • Greg8888 5 months ago
        Yes, and the only way to do that is to stop funding the IMF, World Bank, NATO and all these corrupt global organizations that take US tax dollars and build manufacturing plants in 3rd world countries. We are subsidizing our competition and therefore paying for our job losses. It needs to stop!
      • Chicago Mets Fan 5 months ago
        With union negotiated labor costs? Good luck with that. Why would I manufacture something here when I could do so for half the cost somewhere else?
    • J Smith  •  5 months ago
      No middle class, no housing market.
      • advoke 5 months ago
        It is more cost effective to rent and save the difference for retirement and you will do much better. That dream is bust!
      • PhoenixJack 5 months ago
        Right on, I have been saying this for years.
    • Wise Old Girl  •  5 months ago
      Those 200,000 new jobs are mostly seasonal. Can't buy much of a house with what you make selling Xmas trees or working at Wally World. Especially, when you'll be laid off again on Jan. 1st.
      • Glenda 5 months ago
        mostly seasonal AND minimum wage!
      • bud 5 months ago
        You are sooo right, and most people know this, it will be sad when just when they need to pay off their gift giving bills, they will be out of a job. I am so sorry for our young workers.
      • marc 5 months ago
        Jan 1st thats real nice I got laid off on Dec 28th
    • Boise Rocker  •  5 months ago
      120K-200K McJobs created in November, and 315K people dropped out of the job market altogether...yep, sounds like the road to recovery to me. /sarc
      • Anonymous 5 months ago
        it is the road to recovery, those who give up working hard will accept their lower standard of living, it's the choice they made.
      • Linda 5 months ago
        There have been some choices made, but there have also been some who dropped out of the work force and noone has told us what they are doing to exist. If the jobs that are being created keep on being ones that cannot supprot a family, then there is no point to creating them. We, as Americans, need to figure out how to support our own businesses. ABC seems to have a plan in that regard. Need to pay more attention there.
    • rcatl  •  5 months ago
      I am very skeptical regarding purchasing a house. I lost my job about 2 yrs ago when I was at the top of my pay scale. For my boss to save money, he got rid of me and hired someone fresh out of school 30k less than what I was making. It took me 1.5 yrs to get another job. Four wks ago I was laid off again. Why? Because the owner needed to save money (again I was at the top of my pay scale). I over heard her and the office manager discussing how they should hire someone fresh out of school b/c it would be cheaper. I am now looking into opening up my own place. Scary to think I have more job security having my own business than working for someone.
    • mustang  •  5 months ago
      Bring back the Glass-Stegall Act. It banned commercial banks from investing in the commodoties markets. It was repealed in 1999. Since then, the amount invested in oil commodoties went from $13 billion in 2000 to $340 billion in 2010. Most of the additional investment came from commercial banks. This did two things: it raised the price of oil dramatically and it took the banks' attention away from what they are supposed to be doing with our deposits - making home mortgage loans and business loans. That is why the banks aren't loaning money.
    • harry  •  5 months ago
      Oh yea let's create another 200,000 burger flipping jobs, or retail jobs and see how fast people start moving in! You cannot purchase a home on those wages unless the banks really haven't changed.
    • Abby  •  5 months ago
      Where did they dig this up??You,have more Poeple living with thweir parents,now more than ever before and nothing has gotten better.What,cardboard box did they crawl out from under??They,can even sell the houses they have right now..
    • American Soldier  •  5 months ago
      Will someone please explain the logic behind getting things cheaper is the reason jobs have gone overseas. The last time I check nothing in America is cheaper. Things are only getting more expensive.
    • louise  •  5 months ago
      What a lazy, useless and pro big bank piece of propaganda this article is. Yep,just let the banks keep running their agenda of systemic and systematic fraud bilking and destroying American homeowners, taxpayers, neighborhoods and cities.... The truth is out...we (The Fed) gave these Wall Street criminals 7.7 trillion dollars essentially interest, collateral and strings free. Wall Street did not loan one dime of that secret treasure to homeowners who they'd raped or demonstrate one ounce of responsibility for reversing this catastrophe they .wrought. Not one of these Bank criminals has gone to jail, not one dollar has been paid in restitution for their casino/derivatives crimes. And this stupid, stupid article just keeps promoting their agenda ...nothing new here...justmore #$%$ to keep the economy and everybody(!) in economic misery for years to comeand the banks profiting from their crimes with the complicity of the Fed and the Obama administration, specifically major tools like Geithner & Donovan. We've got to stop paying these Arsonist Banks not letting them run the show!It's time to break Wall Street's Cycle of Abuse and Real Estate Crimes. Our economy is not going to recover until the real estate economy is taken out of their omnipotence and stabilized. The Fed, The Administration and all state A,G.'s need to force the banks to reduce all mortgages to current market values and interest rates. Threaten every "Mers" robosigned mortgage they hold as fraudulent, and pursue criminal charges UP their predatory food chains.This article is just plain offensive. Informed and intelligent Americans are so far beyond tolerating or believing that Wall Street and the banks who destroyed our communitiesand plundered our common wealth should be allowed to continue manipulating and profiting from their crimes....keeping this whole country in economic agony. It's time for these Banks to face financial and criminal justice for the catastrophe they orchestrated.
    • FREDDIE  •  5 months ago
      There cannoot be a recovery as long as employers continue to hire part time workers with no benefits. For more than fifteen years now most large employers have decided to hire only part time workers with no benefits. A large majority of manufacturing is done in other countries while the American workers are suffering. Major corporations need to bring back jobs to this country. We cannot survive on service related industries.
    • stonehawken  •  5 months ago
      a home owner who lost his or her home because of the bank frauds and such i did not see the government stepping in and giving them a bail out check to keep there homes but saw the government step in for the banks and give them a check ---and that money the banks got went to the ceo's and there in pocket elected officals it just goes to show who runs this country
    • KR1SIS - ham radio op  •  5 months ago
      Of course the unemployment numbers are better, more people that can't find jobs are no longer unemployed because they no longer collect unemployment. Those "lucky" ones that found jobs work for minimum wage. Yeah, everybody's rich.
    • PoodlesKnow  •  5 months ago
      Those who still owe even one more payment on a mortgage are NOT homeOWNERS! They "own" a mortgage; not a home. The bank or govt facility that holds/guarantees that mortgage own the home. 50 yrs ago the big event was "burning" the mortgage (papers) in the fireplace. In todays moronic world getting a mortgage is for some reason an event to celebrate. Another aspect of reverse evolution. At the rate things are headed, in another 250 years humans will have the intellectual capacity of a rooster.
    • p  •  5 months ago
      the problem is most banks will not loan money now if you dont have stellar credit and 20% down now on a 150,000 dollar house you need a 40,000 dollar down payment when these banks are going to be doubling and in some cases triple their money over a 30 year loan and this is the american dream huh RU HIGH
    • RickT  •  5 months ago
      Am no expert, but here's my prediction: I say home ownership is rapidily becoming a thing of the past, especially for working people. Now that working for a company till you retire is a thing of the past. People will have to be ready to pick up and go, almost on a moments notice. Being saddled with a mortgage and unable to sell it means your stuck, if you lose your job, then unable to sell it, with no job, you'll lose the home. And round &round it goes.
    • merlispro  •  5 months ago
      Let's see - we have a bank of america representative telling us that they should be able to foreclose faster and this will help???

      if bank of america would simply refinance all the homes it has targeted for foreclosure, forgive the missed payments, reset interest rates to 3% it would likely do a lot more good than faster foreclosure proceedings.

      bank of america was one of the biggest contributors to the mortgage meltdown and they clearly preferred that most of the mortgages they underwrote between 2001-2006 would fail, so they could take over the property.

      The problem was that they weren't a trivial side player in that game and when you put together all the people doing the same thing - it became synergistic. Lots of foreclosures - nobody to buy them.

      The last place we should look for advice on how to fix the housing problem is the source of the problem.
    • dr.wuwu  •  5 months ago
      Another Fairy tale from our friends @U.S News......and they lived happily ever after.
    • Ryan  •  5 months ago
      How about getting the government out of the housing market?

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