While discussion on the state of the current US housing market is pretty much finished, experts have turned their attention from Is the housing market falling to Where is it going to fall first? And hardest?
There are many methods to predicting, and
while none of them can even be qualified as scientific, there are trusted
voices in the din that people look to to see a glimpse of what might happen
with real estate markets around the country.
Mark Zandi is one of those voices. He works
for Moody’seconomy.com, and he has taken it upon himself to attempt to
formulate a prediction as to which housing markets are doomed and which may get
off easy.
The results? Zandi predicts dire results in
Cape Coral, Florida, where he sees a decline in home
values of almost 19 percent. Reno,
Nevada will be hard hit as well,
with a predicted 17% drop in housing prices. Stockton, California
will also be creamed, suffering from a 15% drop. How did Zandi come up with
these numbers? His recipe consisted of a few heaping helpings of supply and
demand, a generous serving of changes in local mortgage rates, a smidge of
demographic trends, a teaspoon of job market analysis and a pinch of new
housing numbers.
A
second, and far less analytical prediction method is floating around, too.
Traders at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange can actually trade real estate
futures in ten different housing markets. Their findings? San Diego will be the hardest hit, with
declines around 8 percent. Los Angeles
won’t be much better off, with an expected decline in value of just under 7
percent. Las Vegas,
which many people see as being over valued because of the endless influx of new
residents in the last 20 years, is predicted to see a drop of almost 8 percent.
There were several areas where the two
predictions matched. Both predicted almost the exact same decline in San Diego and in Washington
D.C.
But there were also major differences. Boston, which has already
been taking the brunt of the current housing market is predicted by Zandi to
only see an increase of just over 2 percent in value lost. The CME traders,
however, see a continued decline of 7 percent.
While no one knows for sure what’s going to
happen, the one thing pretty much everyone agrees on now is that the market is
headed south. The best choice might be to just hang onto that property until
things start going your way again, but it’s anyone’s prediction as to how long
that is going to be.
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