NBN Online for the week of October 2, 2006

(Plain Text Version) for full graphical version, click here.

In This Issue:

Front Page
Buying in a Soft Housing Market
Play Builders' Free Online Pro Football Game. Don't Miss Out.
Share Nation's Building News With Your Staff. It's Free.
Downswing Will Not Drag Economy Into Recession
Coast to Coast
Even as Housing Prices Cool, Families Continue to Flee Florida
Politics & Government
House Passes Bill Giving Property Owners Day in Court
House Approves HOPE VI, Bill on FHA Multifamily Limits
Multifamily
HUD Convinced Not to Raise FHA Multifamily Premiums
Codes and Standards
NAHB Defeats Mandated Fire Sprinklers at Code Hearings
Economics & Finance
New Home Sales Bounce-Back in August a Nice Surprise
Pending Home Sales Index Suggests Market Stabilizing
Design
Attached at the Garage, Homes Live and Look Detached
Tips
Builder's Tip: Emergency Flat-Roof Repair
Business Management
IRS Plans to Look at Small Builders More Closely
'How to Thrive in Changing Market' at Custom Builder Symposium
Protect Your Profits Through ‘Defensive’ Estimating
Remodelers
Remodelors Council Gala at Chicago Cultural Center
Sales
Last Call to Enter The Nationals Sales and Marketing Awards
Education
Want to Know More About Designations? Ask an Expert
Education Calendar
Environment
Company Faces Penalties Over Lead-Based Paint Notice
Building Quality
National Housing Quality Award Winners Announced
Workforce housing
Easy Design Changes Can Help Connect With Latino Market
Walnut Place an Answer to High Home Costs in California
Labor
Scholarships Help Job Corps Grads Start Housing Careers
Building Products
New Deadbolt Secures Homes Against Holiday Burglaries
TV
NAHB-Produced Programs on HGTV & DIY This Week
Endowment
Centex CEO to Discuss Future of Home Building on Webcast
Association News
Challenging Times Put NAHB Membership on the Rise
NAHB Funds Transforming Lives of Tsunami Victims
Free NAHB Video Instructs How to Deal With the Media
GM $500 Off Exclusive Offer for NAHB Members
UPS Offers Up to 30% Discount to NAHB Members on Shipping
Find Key Employees Through the NAHB Online Career Center
Calendar of Events
NAHB Career Center

Related Articles

Play Builders' Free Online Pro Football Game. Don't Miss Out.

Share Nation's Building News With Your Staff. It's Free.

Downswing Will Not Drag Economy Into Recession

Buying in a Soft Housing Market
Ken Harney

(Editor's note: Providing encouraging information to prospective home buyers on opportunities in today’s changing housing marketplace, the following article by national syndicated columnist Ken Harney appears in the Sept. 29 issue of the NAHB consumer e-newsletter NAHB HouseKeys. It is also the latest addition to the Back to Basics toolkit materials available online to help NAHB members respond to new challenges in a slower environment for home sales. Home builders associations and home builders can reprint or link to this article to help convey to the public the message that current market conditions are favorable for buying a home.)

Everybody knows the "housing boom" is over in most parts of the country. But what does that mean for people who are thinking about buying a new home?

Is a "soft" market a good time to buy? Or is it a time when it's smarter to just sit on the sidelines, and wait and see where things are headed?

Here are some practical thoughts that you can add to your own analysis of whether to shop, buy or hibernate for awhile.

Let's look at both sides of the equation:

First, slumping real estate markets also go by another name — buyers' markets. Boom real estate periods, by contrast, tend to be known as sellers' markets because most of the advantages are with sellers, not buyers.

Unlike the boom years of 2003-2005, home sellers and home builders today no longer have the upper hand. They can't expect double-digit price increases year after year. Or long lines at sales offices or open houses. Serious buyers are fewer in number and a whole lot slower to sign on the dotted line.

Builders have to sweeten their packages of concessions in buyers' markets — offering discounts, free upgrades and other deals that they'd never consider during the boom years.

Many builders also offer discounted financing packages to make their houses more affordable in buyers' markets. Often builders have special relationships with large mortgage lenders or they own a mortgage subsidiary themselves. That puts them in the position to create cut-rate mortgage programs and even custom-tailored financing solutions for buyers that would never have been possible during the boom years.

Finally, home builders — by necessity — are now more open to negotiating specific details of transactions with serious buyers. There's no hard and fast guarantee that you'll get everything you bargain for — after all, successful negotiations require give and take on both sides. But you can be guaranteed that builders will listen and try to go the extra mile.

Now let's look at the reverse perspective.

There's no question that softening real estate markets can look a little scary. Nobody can tell you for certain where real estate prices will go in the coming year. Nobody can tell you exactly where we are in the real estate cycle. Are we close to the bottom of the post-boom correction? Or is there still a ways to go?

Most economists, along with the Federal Reserve Board, forecast that the boom cycle will be followed by a year or two of flat prices, possibly slight declines, followed by a gradual resumption of the upward cycle. We are well into that pattern right now.

Looking at the cyclical ups and downs of real estate during the past seven decades, only in markets where local unemployment rates are high or rising — and where mortgage money comes with high interest rates — do housing values suffer significantly in downturns. Otherwise, the historical pattern has been for values to flatten out or go slightly negative for short periods before rebounding and resuming their normal upward movement.

Although some local markets are facing employment problems and layoffs this year, job growth in most parts of the country is solid. Mortgage rates continue to hover just slightly above the near-record lows they reached in 2004, and are a full two percentage points below the average interest rates paid by mortgage borrowers during the past three decades.

So where does this all take us? What's the bottom line?

Any way you look at it:

  • We're in a market where buyers have the upper hand and the overall economic risks look reasonable. That was not the case just two or three years ago.

  • Mortgage money is affordable and plentiful — big plusses for buyers.

  • The best real estate bargains almost always occur in buyers' markets. Prices and terms this year may look like great deals a few years down the road.

  • If you truly want or need to buy a home, the equation is more positive than it has been in several years: lower prices, more homes to choose from and more flexible sellers.


You may want to take a cautious approach and not plunge into a purchase while the cycle is still in flux. On the other hand, you may want to lock in a low price and low mortgage rates sooner rather than later.

But either way, here is my suggestion: shop and research what's available in the communities where you seriously want to buy one day. Get a good grasp on what's selling, at what price, with what features and on what size lot.

Then, when you feel comfortable about getting into the market, you will have the knowledge to identify what is — and what isn't — a super deal for you on a new house.

For additional information on this article or NAHB HouseKeys, e-mail Niki Clark at NAHB or call her at 800-368-5242 x8061.

NAHB members can find the Back to Basics toolkit at www.nahb.org/toolkit. Members must have a login to www.nahb.org to view this product. To create a login, go to www.nahb.org/login or click on the log-in button on the main menu bar. For assistance, call the NAHB Member Service Center at 800-368-5242.

Kenneth R. Harney writes an award-winning, nationally syndicated column on real estate ("The Nation's Housing") for The Washington Post Writers Group. The weekly column currently appears in approximately 90 newspapers across the United States. Harney, who heads his own consulting firm based in Chevy Chase, Md., is also managing director of the National Real Estate Development Center, one of the country's most-active sponsors of professional education conferences for real-estate attorneys, developers, syndicators, mortgage executives and public agencies.


 

Sponsored by
Freddie Mac

 
 
> The GSEs and Housing Affordability: A Necessary But Not Sufficient Condition
> Freddie Mac Keeps America's Eggonomy Stable. Enroll In Eggonomics 101
 
 

Sponsored by
McGraw Hill
Construction

 
 
> Find and manage projects right from your desktop.
> Get your company listed in the new McGraw-Hill Construction Directory.
 
 

Sponsored by
NAHB

 
 
> Custom Builder Symposium - Oct. 27-29
> Building Systems Councils Showcase - Nov. 5-8
> State & Local Government Affairs Conference - Nov. 9-11