Short-Term Housing Outlook Remains Bleak
Recent housing market indicators — including NAHB’s survey measures as well as incoming data on home sales, housing starts and permits, housing inventories and home prices ― show that the housing market contraction still is underway, and we expect further declines to occur in the economic and financial market environment we’re projecting for the rest of this year and in 2009. That environment includes increasingly difficult conditions in the markets for land acquisition land development and construction loans (AD&C markets).
In the single-family sector, we continue to believe that home sales will bottom out around mid-2008, that starts of new units will bottom out around the end of this year, and that house prices will stabilize by the end of 2009 (national average basis).
We expect starts to be down by 37% for 2008 as a whole, followed by decent recovery in 2009.
We’ve recently cut our forecast of activity in the multifamily sector, based on evidence of heavy oversupply in the condo component, unsustainable production levels in the rental component (both market-rate and subsidized rental segments), tightening conditions in AD&C markets, and a weakening market for low-income housing tax credits.
The revised forecast shows a 7% decline in multifamily starts for 2008, followed by a decline of 22% for 2009.
Our current forecast shows a slight decline in total housing starts for 2009 as a whole, and residential fixed investment contracts through the first quarter of the year. [return to top]
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