NBN Online for the week of March 10, 2008

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In This Issue:

Front Page
Congress Urged to Act Soon to Shore Up Housing, Economy
Housing Finance System Reform Needed to End Mortgage Crisis
58 Members Honored for 50 Years of Service to NAHB
NAHB ‘Weathering the Economic Storm’ Videos Now Online
Layouts for Living
Floor Plans: California Project Proves Green Can Be Affordable
Coast to Coast
Subprime Alternative: FHA Reform Deal Close
Housing Forum
Letter to the Editor: Bring Back First-Time Buyers
Politics & Government
Eco-Terrorism Against Street-of-Dreams Homes Denounced
Florida Looks at Crackdown on Copper and Metal Thefts
Government Affairs Awards Deadline Is March 21
Legislative Conference Coming at a Pivotal Time for Housing
Economics & Finance
Conforming and FHA Loan Limits Increased
National Sales Tax Would Be a Setback for Housing
Eye on the Economy: Housing-Directed Stimulus Still Needed
Useful Links to Monitor Economic and Housing Trends
Tips
Builders’ Tip: Fine-Tuning an Aerosol Insulation Nozzle
Business Management
Builders Told to Work With Lenders to Resolve Problems
Builders Get ‘Hands-On’ Software Knowledge at IBS
Improve Business Operations With ‘Cost of Doing Business Study’
Submit Comments by June 1 to Update ‘Performance Guidelines’
Sales and Marketing
Asking for the Sale the Key to Successful Selling
Safety
Newer Employees More Likely to Suffer Fatal Injuries
Technology
Integrating Green Home Technologies Grows Margins
50Plus Housing
Football Great Manning to Kick Off 50+ Housing Symposium
Help Rebuild New Orleans at 50+ Housing Symposium
Multifamily
Builders Less Confident in Rental Apartment Market
Register for the Multifamily Pillars Conference on April 1-3
Remodelers
Three Easy Steps to Go Green Remodeling
Commercial
Enter NCBC 2009 Awards of Excellence Competition
Education
Boost Business Skills During National Designation Month
Education Calendar
Environment
Tighter Smog Standards Could Raise Home Building Costs
Single Lot Permits Would Improve Stormwater Regulation
New NAHB Tool Provides Storm Water Compliance Tips
Green Building
IRS Announces Rule Changes for Energy Tax Credit
Labor
Students Battle in Construction Project Competition at IBS
Building Products
Trane Air Conditioners Use Self-Charging Technology
Honeywell Bullet-Proof Fabric Used in Hurricane-Resistant Curtains
TV
NAHB-Produced Programs on DIY, Fine Living and HGTV
Endowment
Endowment Doubles IBS Student Scholarships for 2009
HBAs: Challenge/Build/Grow Proposals Due by March 28
Association News
Philadephia-Area Builder Bernard Drueding, Jr. Dies at 86
New: Register Online for Spokesperson Training
April Is ‘New Homes Month,’ Free Promotional Toolkit Available Online
Drive Away With a Shiny New $500 GM Private Offer
UPS Offers Up to 30% Discount to NAHB Members on Shipping
Introducing the Hertz Green Collection. Reserve and Conserve.
Calendar of Events
NAHB Career Center

Related Articles

Floor Plans: California Project Proves Green Can Be Affordable

Housing Finance System Reform Needed to End Mortgage Crisis

58 Members Honored for 50 Years of Service to NAHB

NAHB ‘Weathering the Economic Storm’ Videos Now Online

Congress Urged to Act Soon to Shore Up Housing, Economy

With the negative drag of the housing downturn now spilling over into other sectors of the economy and threatening to immerse the nation in a full-fledged recession, in a March 4 teleconference, NAHB Executive Vice President and CEO Jerry Howard and David Seiders, the association’s chief economist, urged Congress to move quickly to enact legislation to shore up the housing market.

“It is obvious to everybody that we are in the midst of a dramatic housing downswing, the deepest and most rapid since the Great Depression,” said Seiders, with a 10-month inventory of unsold new and existing homes clogging the marketplace.

New-home sales and single-family housing starts already are down by more than 50% from their most recent cyclical peaks, Seiders said, and the decline is ongoing, with a 22% drop in sales and a 30% slump in single-family production projected for this year.

“The key is seeking out some bottoms for 2008,” he said. If Congress and the Administration do what needs to be done to alleviate the current mortgage credit crunch and the tightening of lending for housing, he said, sales should stabilize by mid-year and starts by year’s end, setting the stage for industry growth in 2009.

“It really is critical for the overall economy that housing forms this kind of a pattern,” Seiders said, because the income tax rebate going out to consumers in the next few months, while it may be enough to halt the current recessionary slide, will run out of steam by the end of this year.

“If housing is not showing some improvement, growth could be set up for another major setback in early 2009,” he said. The decline in housing production was responsible for subtracting 1.25 percentage points from the gross domestic product in the fourth quarter, he said, when the economy was barely growing at a sluggish 0.6%.

Do Something and Do It Soon

“It seems incumbent upon policymakers to take some steps to ensure that as the impact of the stimulus law declines, the housing markets are sufficiently shored up,” said Howard.

With the housing market continuing to decline, “it is incumbent upon them to do something and do something soon.”

Howard indicated that legislation to reform the regulation of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac was long overdue, and that if this effort had not “languished as long as it has” in Congress, housing’s government-sponsored enterprises would be in a better position today to respond aggressively to the housing slump.

On another piece of vitally important legislation that has been bogged down on Capitol Hill — modernization of the Federal Housing Administration enabling it to provide further assistance to first-time and moderate-income home buyers — Howard cited the recent action of House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank (D-Mass.) to move the bill forward by dropping from it a provision to create an affordable housing trust fund. Frank indicated that he would look for other legislative vehicles to move the trust fund forward.

“We hope others on Capitol Hill will recognize Chairman Frank’s efforts,” Howard said, and work to get the FHA bill signed into law as soon as possible.

During a March 6 hearing on GSE reform, Senate Banking Committee Chairman Chris Dodd (D-Conn.) noted that significant progress had been made on achieving a final FHA modernization bill. With the bill in a House-Senate conference, Dodd said that only one issue remained to be resolved, and he expected the bill to emerge from conference as early as this week.

Howard voiced disappointment that a provision in the Senate economic stimulus package to allow businesses to carry back net operating losses for five years failed to make it into the final legislation. The provision, he said, “in times like this would greatly help small business people stay in business. The viability of these businesses is a very real and tangible question. Anything that can be done to keep these people in business should be done.”

Howard also called for a law to expand the use of mortgage revenue bonds by removing a provision that limits their use to first-time home buyers. Without that restriction, states could use them for refinancing. “The benefits are obvious,” he said. “It would keep people in their homes and not add to the oversupply of inventory.”

And he said that Congress should consider a temporary tax credit for buyers of newly built homes modeled after the Ford Administration program that worked effectively during the recession of 1975 to 1976. The quick enactment of a credit “for the duration of this calendar year would go far in releasing pent-up demand for housing, reestablishing consumer confidence in the value of homeownership and diminishing the amount of inventory on the market,” he said.

Several senators have introduced tax-credit legislation, including Sens. Johnny Isakson (R-Ga.) and Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.).

Howard also said that NAHB would like to see Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid's (D-Nev.) housing bill brought back to the floor without the controversial bankruptcy provision that was its undoing when its consideration was blocked two weeks ago. “The rest of that bill would have been very pro-housing,” he said.


 

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