1. NAR Annual Survey Reveals Notable Decline in First-time Buyers
“WASHINGTON (November 3, 2014) – Despite an improving job market and low interest rates, the share of first-time buyers fell to its lowest point in nearly three decades and is preventing a healthier housing market from reaching its full potential, according to an annual survey released today by the National Association of Realtors®. The survey additionally found that an overwhelming majority of buyers search for homes online and then purchase their home through a real estate agent.”
2. Deflation is a growing possibility: Bill Gross
“(Reuters) – Famed bond investor Bill Gross on Monday warned that deflation remained a growing possibility despite aggressive monetary policies by central banks around the world.”
3. Despite equity boom, many homes remain seriously underwater
“The equity boom, which has added an estimated $1.6 trillion to the personal net wealth of American homeowners in the last year, has slowed dramatically. It’s not over by any means. It has just lost some of its previous pep.”
4. Agents, lenders fill niche as Chinese money floods housing market
“When Alisha Chen first got into real estate 10 years ago, she didn’t really plan on becoming a gatekeeper for a global housing market.”
5. More Americans Are Preferring the Lease to the Mortgage
“THE homeownership rate in the United States plunged during the Great Recession. Many families lost their homes as prices collapsed and unemployment rose.”
6. Taxpayers could again be stuck with mortgages
“Say we didn’t hear that. Say we didn’t hear that rules for mortgages guaranteed by the taxpayers are going lax once again.”
7. 6 housing boomtowns that haven’t come back
“They were the boomtowns of the Great Housing Bubble, Sun Belt meccas for thousands of families wanting to live the American Dream on easy credit and little money down.”
8. Why more liberal cities have less affordable housing
“Derek Thompson of The Atlantic has an interesting article covering some of the reasons why, despite their ideological commitment to helping the disadvantaged, more liberal cities tend to have less affordable housing…”
9. Construction spending declines for second month
“For the second month in a row construction spending took a downturn, dropping 0.4% in September after August’s 0.8% drop.”
10. Zillow: Millions of potential houses lost to “doubling up”
“It’s not just millennials that are moving back in with mom and dad. The number of Americans living with roommates or adult family members jumped to more than a third of U.S. adults in 2012, up from 27.4% in 2006, a new report from Zillow said.”
11. Monday Morning Cup of Coffee: Credit positive in HFA risk retention exemption
“Monday Morning Cup of Coffee takes a look at news crossing HousingWire’s weekend desk, with more coverage to come on bigger issues.”
12. TEMECULA WINE COUNTRY: Proposed housing developments causing a stir
“Developers have created a stir in the Temecula Valley Wine Country, proposing to build hundreds of homes among the vines after Riverside County adopted a plan emphasizing entertainment, winemaking and growing grapes.”
13. LAKE ELSINORE: City may allow lakeshore home construction
“It would be the ideal getaway pad – a cozy cottage with a picture window overlooking the lake, a patio so close to the water that one could hear ripples licking the beach sand. A spot to sip a cabernet as the sun slips behind the mountains to the west.”
“The latest figures from the National Association of Realtors show that both buyer and seller traffic declined substantially to start the fall selling season. The assumption was that the mania of 2013 would carry forward and slapping on a faux hardwood floor would suddenly add $50,000 in value to your crap shack. This lipstick on a pig trickery is not getting the mileage it did in 2013 when people were full on delusional about buying housing, even though volume was incredibly low. The current meme that is now floating is one of “well you missed out in 201x to buy and are now priced out!” Ironically these people are not out in the market buying today as you would expect if they truly believed in the mantra that they keep preaching. In this housing market, timing and luck intertwine with speculation. There are many factors to examine including structural, location, opportunity costs, and mobility. There is a clear demand for rental housing and this has pushed rental prices higher although we are also seeing a limit here as well. The NAR reporting on a slow start to the selling season this fall signifies what we already know. There is a standoff going on in the current housing market.”
15. Five States Account for 44 Percent of 12-Month Foreclosure Sum in September
“Just as they did in August, the same five states accounted for nearly half of all completed foreclosures in the U.S. for the previous 12-month period, according to CoreLogic’s September 2014 National Foreclosure Report released last week.”