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Real Estate Trends for 2007

By
Real Estate Agent with Re/Max Of Naperville

Real Estate Trends For 2007

The national and local real estate markets are made up primarily of five sectors, Residential, Retail, Industrial, Commercial and Investment, which all overlap on their fringes. While it should be noted that national trends can differ drastically from local trends, and that there are economic influences such as interest rates that affect all markets, overall, all sectors are currently healthy and will be getting healthier through 2007. Now let me tell you why, sector by sector.

Residential: The news you've been reading over the past year is either grossly overstated or just plain wrong. There has been no crash in real estate pricing and only in certain select markets has there been a bubble that has now mostly deflated. The strength of a residential market is dependent on financing rates, overall unemployment and household formation. Market downturns are caused by excess supply or the fairly rapid increase of the first two factors mentioned. Specific markets, such as luxury condominiums in Miami, Tucson and Los Angeles, experienced supply and prices which overshot their targeted market. Those are the headlines we are being bombarded with. Interest rates remain in a very affordable sweet spot of between five to six and one half percent, the unemployment rate is at a historic low of below 5 percent and normal household formation is being added to by an ever-increasing flood of immigrants as well as the growing trend of empty nesters purchasing second homes. While there are bargains in the overbuilt condo markets in some cities, there has only been a leveling out of pricing for prime residential properties in most markets (except in areas like Michigan that are dependent on the shrinking auto industry). So don't wait to make that bid thinking that prices will go much lower.

Investment: The real estate investment market is exhibiting unparalleled strength and a tide of dollars continues to flow into this inflation protected sector. While the falling dollar will cause the nation's real estate to be more attractive to offshore investors, the big story here is the continuation of lowering cap rates as investors perceive that residual values at the end of a typical holding period should increase substantially, due to land use changes. We are constantly asked, "Why did that property sell for so much money?" The answer is usually that an investor was satisfied with a 4- to 5-percent going-in cap rate, as they were confident that their industrial building, parking lot, or office building would grow substantially in value, based on growing population density, rezoning pressures and continued gentrification trends.

Summary: Without question, real estate is the sector of choice for 2007. A combination of stable rates, positive demographic trends and a falling dollar, as well as the double benefits of inflation protection and investment leverage, will continue to cause it to be the nation's healthiest economic component.

 
Anonymous
MK

Funny!!

Apr 06, 2009 08:43 AM
#1