Prices are rising and inventories are falling in markets throughout the
United States, which has led financial reporting and forecasting firm Kiplinger
to declare the housing recovery “firmly” in motion. Moreover, the company says
housing will help carry the overall economy at a time when U.S. exports are
decreasing, says Karen Mracek, a Kiplinger editor and real estate analyst.
“The biggest reason we think we’re on firm ground is that we’re seeing every
indicator on the way up,” Mracek says. “As with the overall economy, it’s kind
of hard to call the bottom or the pivot point. But we’re seeing a range of
indicators that suggest pretty solid growth going forward.”
In addition to home values and supply, positive indicators include the number
of multiple-bid situations, new-home construction, and credit availability, she
says. Solid improvements in these fundamentals will lead to formation of more
new households and will also help more borrowers come out from underwater — and
trade up to a new home. They’ll also create new jobs in real estate and
construction, Mracek explains.
The recent gains made in housing have some concerned that real estate could
be entering another bubble market, but Mracek disagrees with that assessment.
“There might be [a bubble] in some concentrated markets,” she says. “But I don’t
think it will be a bubble that’s as widespread and disastrous as the one that
happened in the last decade.”
Improvements have been — and will continue to be — uneven. The turnaround
will probably be slower in metro areas in Florida and the Midwest.
Nationally, Mracek says the current housing recovery is real and sustainable,
but she also acknowledges that the rise in home values and decline in
inventories won’t maintain their current pace.
“We see prices leveling out a bit more [in the future] from the late jumps in
2012,” she says. “There are still foreclosures for the banks to work through. As
prices improve, you’re going to see banks get rid of REOs.”
Source: http://realtormag.realtor.org/daily-news/2013/03/12/kiplinger-housing-recovery-firmly-underway
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