Is the Housing Market Getting Better or Worse?

 

The WSJ featured this photo of a bulldozer tearing down houses in Southern California.

The WSJ featured this photo of a bulldozer tearing down houses in Southern California.

Today has been filled with mixed messages in regards to the housing market.  Is it performing well or poorly? The Wall Street Journal published images of bulldozers tearing down half-finished homes in Southern California because the lender determined the cost of completing the homes would be more than they could be sold for.  On the other hand, the New York Times published a front page story about how the market in Sacramento is rebounding— a potentially good sign.  Sales are up 45% since last year. Sales in Las Vegas, another market hit hard when the housing bubble burst, are up 35%. 

 

So which is it? It seems hard to tell. It is easy and addictive to follow all the housing articles published recently, but, after writing on several of them, it appears that the bottom line keeps remaining the same:

– Yes, there are a lot of foreclosures, permeating classes where they’ve never been felt before. 

– Yes, many markets have been extremely hard hit by the housing crisis.  Las Vegas, Phoenix, California, and Miami are four of the worst. Very few, if any, areas have emerged unscathed.

– Yes, the new $8,000 tax credit has helped buyers, leading many first-time homeowners to enter the market.  Perhaps as a result, many areas have seen sales increase this past year and in the past few months.

It therefore seems safe to draw the following conclusions:  

1. The nation was hit hard by the housing crisis.

2. Foreclosures still abound, as neither the economic nor the housing crisis have lifted yet.  This is especially true amongst the middle-class, who in many cases took longer to feel the effects of the crisis.

3. However, foreclosures mean that prices have been pushed down in many markets, leading to a glut of new buyers who, in addition to pursuing the tax credit, can pay less in a mortgage payment than they can in their monthly rent, saving money by buying a home.  This situation is especially profound in the depressed market, but leads many analysts to think that there are signs of life in the market.

What do you think? Is the housing market getting better or worse?