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Housing really that bad?

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  • Housing really that bad?

    Found this at
    http://www.siliconinvestor.com/readm...msgid=22913701

    SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) -- The housing slowdown has turned some areas of Phoenix and Las Vegas into "ghost towns," where many unsold homes stand empty, Janet Yellen, president of the San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank, said Monday.
    Yellen said that she heard the ominous description from a "major home builder," who told her that the share of unsold homes in some subdivisions around the two Western cities has topped 80%.
    "Though the situation isn't that bad everywhere, a significant buildup of home inventory implies that permits and [housing] starts may continue to fall, and the market may not recover for several years," she warned, according to the text of a speech delivered Monday at the Hong Kong Association of Northern California in San Francisco.
    The housing slowdown was one of several factors Yellen cited in which she argued that the current level of interest rates is "moderately restrictive," and that it makes sense to keep it that way "for a time."
    "We have yet to see the full effects of the series of 17 federal funds rate increases -- some are probably still in the pipeline," the Fed president added. "Holding the stance of policy steady for a time makes sense to me."
    Yellen is a member of the Federal Open Market Committee that sets interest rates.
    I wonder what the value/quality of these houses will be when left vacant.
    Will they be sold at lower prices?

  • #2
    Re: Housing really that bad?

    Originally posted by PeterM
    Found this at
    http://www.siliconinvestor.com/readm...msgid=22913701



    I wonder what the value/quality of these houses will be when left vacant.
    Will they be sold at lower prices?
    All of those Mcmansions are pieces of crap. Its difficult to predict how low their price will go, but I do believe that older, more established neighborhoods closer into town will hold their value better.

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    • #3
      Re: Housing really that bad?

      guess if the property is not already owned, skip right to step E

      http://www.itulip.com/housingbubblecorrection.htm

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      • #4
        Re: Housing really that bad?

        It is in Sacramento:

        Flippers In Trouble


        There's been a substantial increase in the last month or so.

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