First: From Barry Habib of Mortgage Market Services via a 3rd party:
According to Barry Habib, there were 485,000 loan originations in 2004. By the end of 2006 there were 232,000, and by the end of this year there will be an estimated 200,000, or roughly where we were back in 2001.
Second: April 2007 price data analysis from Gabriel Stein of Lombard Street Research via same 3rd party:
The significant development there was that the median price of a new home fell below that of an existing home. Monthly price data for both new and existing homes goes back to 1975. In that period, there is only one brief period - from September 1981 to February 1982 (and only in three of those six months) - when prices of new homes were lower than those of existing homes." As she notes, that period also had a very high stock of unsold homes.
I have a graph but don't have a link to hook it from.
If this is really only the beginning, housing is in for a rough ride. Another point made was that the new house price behavior would seem to indicate that home builders are acting like car makers - selling for whatever net can be gained. I'll look into this more when I have the chance.
According to Barry Habib, there were 485,000 loan originations in 2004. By the end of 2006 there were 232,000, and by the end of this year there will be an estimated 200,000, or roughly where we were back in 2001.
Second: April 2007 price data analysis from Gabriel Stein of Lombard Street Research via same 3rd party:
The significant development there was that the median price of a new home fell below that of an existing home. Monthly price data for both new and existing homes goes back to 1975. In that period, there is only one brief period - from September 1981 to February 1982 (and only in three of those six months) - when prices of new homes were lower than those of existing homes." As she notes, that period also had a very high stock of unsold homes.
I have a graph but don't have a link to hook it from.
If this is really only the beginning, housing is in for a rough ride. Another point made was that the new house price behavior would seem to indicate that home builders are acting like car makers - selling for whatever net can be gained. I'll look into this more when I have the chance.
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