Consumers want to buy but are waiting for the right time
This article was taken from our Market Leader website at www.esedonahomes4sale.com. You can see this article and many others at "Insider Tips".
A survey released this week by Hanley Wood shows that recovery is still evading the U.S. housing market. Consumers are in no hurry to buy a home even though they believe in homeownership as well as the significance of a healthy housing market in aiding economic recovery. “We thought people would be soured after watching home values fall, but instead we found the typical American still places high value on homeownership,” said Frank Anton, CEO of Hanley Wood in a release.
The media and data research company polled about 3,000 homeowners and renters in June and more than 68 percent of respondents believed that the time was right to buy a house. But, their belief and wishes were dampened by the realities of today’s economy, the survey found. Unemployment, strict lending practices and an uncertain future continue to take its toll on consumers. “As long as buyers are uncertain about what’s happening in the economy and where house prices are headed, they are going to be slow to move. There is no urging the market,” Kent Colton, a senior fellow at Harvard University’s Joint Center for Housing Studies told Reuters. There is a silver lining though. The survey found that 29 percent of renters and 19 percent of homeowners are considering buying a home in the next two years. Those numbers mean an upward of two million potential buyers are waiting for the right time to plunge into the market.
Now that could definitely be a game changer.
Home Prices May Not Climb Upward Soon
Without an aggressive and creative solution, home prices will not pick up and aid in economic recovery, according to new forecasts. Home values will continue to fall for years, says a poll conducted by the Professional Risk Managers’ International Association for research firm FICO. The poll conducted among industry experts found that bankers expect delinquencies on consumer loans to rise, underwriting to be stricter. They also expect the housing market to continue to struggle for a while. Forty-nine percent of the respondents said they don’t expect home prices to touch 2007 levels before 2020. Mortgage delinquencies will remain at a high for at least another five years, an overwhelming 73 percent of respondents said. The findings indicate that more needs to be done to aid the housing market toward a speedy recovery. Aggressive steps toward creating jobs is not a good enough catalyst for rejuvenating the housing market. Also, the never-before-seen low mortgage rates are good, but they are doing little to help the market when lenders are following strict lending guidelines.
Sedona Market (86336) Is Very Active
This chart is reported from Market Leader at Market Insider
Normally the market slows this time of year in this resort community. As a realtor, it is a good time to take a vacation. However Sedona buyers are actively pursuing that second home, vacation or retirement property. Properties are moving and new home construction, which has been completely dormant is on the rise. On two streets here in Sedona there are 4 homes being built and one just completed! These are very good signs!
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