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Fannie Chief Sees Long Road to Recovery

By
Mortgage and Lending with Regions Mortgage

In his first public speech since taking over as CEO of Fannie Mae, Michael Williams painted a hopeful but difficult road to recovery for the housing market. Speaking before the Exchequer Club in Washington, Williams said the market over the past twelve months has had a “very, very, tough year.” Anyone looking objectively at the economy and the housing market sees hope,” he said, adding “The patient is out of intensive care but still has a very long road ahead to a clean bill of health.” He predicted foreclosures would continue to climb this year and that the inventory of foreclosed properties and unsold homes remain at “exceptionally high levels.” Still, Signs of a recovery in housing are undeniable. New and existing home sales have been posting better than expected gains while the number of pending home sales continues to rise at a record pace. Builder confidence has even managed to rise slightly in recent months and new home starts are showing signs of life as well.

Mortgage rates rose slightly over the past week from near six month lows after stocks ended there near week long-skid and the NASDAQ and S&P 500 both closed Tuesday at 2009 highs. Bonds have held up pretty well, however, as there is still a desire for safe investments in the face of an uncertain economic future. This was evident on Monday when gold prices broke $1,000 per ounce. It is becoming pretty evident that the economy has stepped back from the abyss and is on a much more sound footing than this time last year but doubts still remain about the economy’s strength and the timetable for long-term recovery. As long as the doubts linger, interest rates should remain very attractive. The 30 benchmark thirty-year, fixed-rate is still around 5.25% and has remained in a .25% range for over a month now.

Moshe Cohen
Valuation Solutions - Morristown, NJ
PhD

Hunter

We all know that, it is not new to us. I think the cheer leaders dont seem to get it. Maybe it is their job, Stock market is also not fully getting it

Sep 11, 2009 08:43 AM