After two years of rebounding
off the bottom of a bust, the recovery in the housing market is “changing
shape” this summer, and any new price gains will depend more on job growth and
economic fundamentals.
That’s according to a
new study out Thursday from real estate website Trulia, which found home
prices still growing, but more slowly, nearly everywhere in the U.S.
Of the nation’s 100 largest
metro areas, 97 recorded year-over-year price gains in July, Trulia said, but
for the first time in more than two years, none were growing at an annual rate
faster than 15%. And only one Western market -- the Inland Empire -- remained
in the top 10 fastest-growing markets for price.
That’s a big change from last
year, when many markets in California and the Southwest were seeing big price
run-ups as buyers scooped up foreclosures and other houses relatively cheap.
In Los Angeles County, Trulia
said, prices were up 9.3% year-over-year, but just 1.6% in the last three
months. In Orange County, prices climbed 6.6% in the last year, and 0.9% in the
last three months.
Now that the so-called
“rebound effect” is mostly over, price gains in the next couple of years will depend
largely on the strength of local job markets, Trulia chief economist Jed Kolko
said in the report.
“As prices continue to return
to long-term normal levels the rebound effect will continue to fade,” Kolko
wrote. “Local housing markets will rely more on jobs and wages to support
housing demand and home prices -- which is another step on the road to
recovery.”
“Recovery” may not feel that
way to homeowners. A separate survey released by mortgage giant Fannie Mae
Thursday morning found that Americans were increasingly pessimistic about the
housing market.
Just 42% of respondents to a
Fannie Mae survey said they thought home prices would climb in the next year,
and on average they estimated prices would grow 2.3%. The share of respondents
who thought the U.S. economy was on the wrong track increased by 5 percentage
points, to 59%.
Fannie Mae chief economist
Doug Duncan, though, said the fundamentals of the economy -- particularly six
straight months of solid job growth -- boded well for the housing market.
“We have always believed that
for the housing recovery to be considered robust, we will need strong and
sustained full-time job and income growth,” he said. “If these trends continue,
they could lead to some upside in housing in 2015.”
Source: LA
Times
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