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Things to Know About Real Estate
Prices to bottom: After more than three years of falling,
real estate values have shown signs of stabilization in recent months. At the
national level, home prices slid nearly 9 percent between the third quarter of
2008 and the same period this year, according to the S&P/Case-Shiller home price
report. That's a notable improvement from the second quarter's nearly 15 percent
annual drop and the first quarter's 19 percent decline. This improvement will
give way to a bottom in home prices—finally!—in 2010, but not before additional
declines, Zandi says. Zandi projects home prices will hit bottom in the third
quarter of 2010 after logging a peak-to-trough decline of roughly 37 percent,
based on the S&P/Case-Shiller national home price index. "That means we've got
another roughly 10 percent [decline] to go," Zandi says.
Mortgage delinquencies up: Amid falling home prices and a
nasty labor market, roughly 1 in every 7 mortgages was either past due or in
foreclosure by the end of the third quarter—the highest delinquency rate in the
37-year history of the Mortgage Bankers Association's National Delinquency
Survey. Two factors are expected to drive delinquencies even higher next year.
First, nearly 1 in 4 homeowners currently owes more on their mortgage than the
property is worth, which increases their odds of default. And secondly, the
national unemployment rate—which already stands at 10 percent—will peak at about
10.5 percent in the first quarter of 2010, says Patrick Newport, an economist at
IHS Global Insight. Additional job losses mean more borrowers won't be able to
pay their mortgage bills. "The [delinquency] rate is going to stay up there for
quite a while because the job market is going to be really weak for a while,"
Newport says.
Foreclosures move upstream: The number of foreclosure sales
will increase to about 1.9 million in 2010, according to Moody's
Economy.com. And while we've already seen a growing number of
more expensive homes heading into foreclosure, Heather Fernandez, vice president
of marketing at the real estate search engine Trulia, expects the trend to pick
up steam next year. (Trulia is a U.S. News partner.) "We are poised in
2010 to see a surge of foreclosures from prime borrowers. Hundreds of billions
of dollars in option [adjustable rate] mortgages are set to be recast" next
year, Fernandez says. Option adjustable rate mortgages allow borrowers to make
lower monthly
payments for an initial period, after which the payments adjust—or
"recast"—higher. For some borrowers, the new payments can be more than twice
their initial payments. Combined with other factors, like the loss of a job, a
recasting option adjustable rate mortgage can make borrowers more likely to
default. "These are [properties] at higher price points [and] potentially in
more desirable neighborhoods," Fernandez says.
Mortgage rates to rise: Anyone who purchased a home in 2009
was presented with some extremely attractive mortgage rates. Rates on 30-year,
fixed mortgages fell to an average of 4.88 percent in November, down sharply
from 6.09 a year earlier. A key factor behind the plunge was a Federal Reserve
program, first announced in November of 2008, that purchased debt and
mortgage-backed securities from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. But the program is
slated to expire at the end of the first quarter, and if private investors don't
step up, fixed mortgage rates could jump. (The Fed, of course, could always
decide to extend the program.) The unwinding of this Fed program, the improving
economy, and mounting concern over government deficits could push rates on
30-year, fixed mortgages to roughly 5.5 percent by mid-2010 and close to 6
percent by the end of the year, says Mike Larson of Weiss Research. "Almost all
signs to me point higher," Larson says.
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