DC region to return to 7% annual price increase by 2009

Miat's comment: Today's Washington Post has interesting analysis for the local market place. It seems to suggest that the region will resume long-term average annual growth rate starting by 2009. If that's the case, the recovery is sooner than I expected.

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How Low Will It Go? Well, Where Do You Live?

By Elizabeth Razzi
Washington Post
Saturday, July 7, 2007; F01

The Local Address column usually appears in the Sunday Business section. It is running today because of the Independence Day holiday. It will return to Sunday next weekend.

You might call it the $200,000 question. In a recent Web chat on http://washingtonpost.com, a reader from Manassas summed up what is probably the overriding concern of many local homeowners:

"How much lower is this residential market going to go? I have already lost over $200,000 in value compared to what I paid for my house in Gainesville last year! Even after taking the down payment into consideration, I owe more than what the house is worth! Help!!!"

Let's pause and let that number sink in. Two hundred thousand dollars. Gone. Lea Morris, an agent with Long & Foster's Gainesville office, says a decline of that magnitude is indeed possible.

I had called her to ask about a listing on Etherington Court in Manassas. The house has four bedrooms and 3 1/2 bathrooms on nearly two acres. It's listed at $854,000 in a foreclosure sale. Morris said houses in that neighborhood sold for about $1 million when they were built in 2005.

"The list prices we have now are much lower than a year ago," she said. She's frustrated that so many buyers are still sitting on the fence despite the negotiating leverage they have. "They can go in and offer a lower sales price and get all their closing costs paid," Morris said.

The Manassas area is one of the harder-hit local markets. According to Metropolitan Regional Information Systems, the local multiple listing service, the number of homes sold in Prince William County, plus Manassas and Manassas Park, was 36 percent lower in May than a year earlier, the median price was down more than 6 percent, and time on the market had increased by 85 percent. It was 62 days on average last year; now it's 115 days, based on May numbers, the most recent available.

Builders are trying to unload their surplus of homes with discounts and free upgrades, a tough combination to beat if you're trying to find a buyer for your resale home. And the rising number of foreclosure sales hitting the market -- at discount prices -- drags the market down.

How much worse can it get? When will the market turn around? It depends on who you ask.

If you listen to the investors who are buying futures contracts on residential housing markets, a new type of security that started trading on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange about a year ago, Washington area prices will fall by about 4 percent through May 2008.

These financial instruments, which are based on an index that tracks changes in prices of closed sales, offer investors a hedge against other investments. These housing futures don't have much of a track record yet, but they show that investors are betting real money that prices in the Washington area are headed lower.

Analysts at the Pennsylvania-based forecasting company Moody's Economy.com predict that Washington area prices will fall 6 to 7 percent through the end of 2008. According to their housing analyst, Patrick McPherron, the area's general affluence and strong employment in government and technical sectors may have delayed the decline that other parts of the country have felt, but we're about to play catch-up.

However, neither of those prognosticators makes a distinction among different parts of the Washington area. In some neighborhoods, particularly those where there's not a lot of competition from overstocked new-home builders, values are stable, or even appreciating slightly. Consider this comment from an Alexandria reader during the same Web chat:

"In my neighborhood, home prices continue to increase. It's not double-digit annually, but the year-to-year trend is still slightly upward. By the way, we bought in March of '06 and feel that our house is holding its value well."

Indeed, the MRIS figures show a much less painful experience for homeowners in Alexandria than in Manassas. In Alexandria, the number of homes sold in May was down 12 percent from last year; the median price was down 2.3 percent; and time on the market was up just 5 percent, to 62 days, on average. It's hardly the go-go market of years past, but it probably looks pretty darn good to our Manassas reader.

When asked how much lower local values might go, John McClain, deputy director of the Center for Regional Analysis at George Mason University, said: "Not much. The fundamentals of the economy are very sound." In fact, region-wide, average prices for single-family houses started to turn up in January, he said, even though it was just a 1 percent increase over the previous January. Prices rose during three of the first five months this year compared with last year, he said.

"Suburban Maryland has generally done better than Northern Virginia," McClain said. "There are lot more new homes in Northern Virginia, and the run-up in prices was higher." In fact, quite a few of the new jobs generated in Northern Virginia in recent years have been filled by commuters who live in more affordable communities in the District and Maryland.

McClain said he thinks national forecasters underestimate the strength of local employment, which supports a stronger housing market.

He expects prices to increase about 2 percent this year. They may rise 4 or 5 percent in 2008. That's none too exciting; he notes that the historical average is around 7 percent a year. "We probably won't get back to that until 2009," he said.

"If you get a job in Washington and your household has a reasonably good income and you expect to be in a house five years, you should be fine," McClain said.

Let's hope our reader in Manassas can ride the market out that long.

E-mail Elizabeth Razzi at razzie@washpost.com.

所有跟帖: 

7%, 赶快用勤快人投资法。 -BayFamily- 给 BayFamily 发送悄悄话 BayFamily 的博客首页 (37 bytes) () 07/07/2007 postreply 20:35:36

勤快人投资法 is what I am doing... -miat42- 给 miat42 发送悄悄话 miat42 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 07/07/2007 postreply 20:54:38

是啊,坛子上各位其实都在用勤快人投资法。 -BayFamily- 给 BayFamily 发送悄悄话 BayFamily 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 07/07/2007 postreply 20:57:10

勤快+主动出击才行,... -shn888- 给 shn888 发送悄悄话 (0 bytes) () 07/07/2007 postreply 21:08:36

so is NJ? NJ seems to have stronger money than DC. -pediatrician2- 给 pediatrician2 发送悄悄话 pediatrician2 的博客首页 (0 bytes) () 07/07/2007 postreply 20:38:11

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