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Trulia’s turn for 2014 forecast: In short, optimism

By
Real Estate Agent with RE/MAX Premier Group SL3116482/SL3020723

Dec 11, 2013 – Trulia, Inc. today published its look back at the U.S. housing market’s uneven recovery in 2013. It finds a housing market moving back to its pre-bubble “normal” level from the worst of the recession.

Throughout 2013, the housing recovery has progressed on most fronts but remains unbalanced, according to Trulia’s analysis. Of the five key indicators that Trulia now follows, three are on track towards a full recovery: Non-distressed home sales and prices are approaching normal levels and could reach them in 2014; and the delinquency + foreclosure rate also improved significantly. But construction starts and young-adult employment remain closer to recession levels than to “normal.”
                    
Key housing market indicators

• Existing home sales, excluding distressed (NAR): The market was operating at 79% of “normal” in 2013 compared to 51% at the end of 2012
• Home price level (Trulia): 71% of normal in 2013 compared to 16% at the end of 2012
• Delinquency + foreclosure rate (LPS): 59% of normal in 2013 compared to 37% at the end of 2012
• New home starts (Census): 36% of normal in 2013 compared to 24% at the end of 2012    
• Employment rate, 25-34 year-olds (BLS): 23% of normal in 2013 compared to 28% at the end of 2012
                  
Among the 100 largest U.S. metros, 10 housing markets are back to normal or nearly there, relative to local norms for both home prices and permits. However, most are in Texas and California – none are in Florida.

Trulia’s five housing predictions for 2014

Consumer optimism is climbing back. According to Trulia’s latest consumer survey, 74 percent of Americans said homeownership is part of achieving their personal American Dream – the highest level since January 2010. However, the effects of the recession and housing bust still sting. Here are five predictions by Trulia Chief Economist Jed Kolko:

1. Housing affordability worsens. Rising prices and higher mortgage rates will make buying more expensive in 2014 than in 2013. This means that the rent vs. buy math could tip in favor of renting for a couple of housing markets, starting with San Jose. But buying will remain cheaper than renting nationally and in almost every metro.

2.  The home-buying process gets less frenzied.
 Homebuyers who can afford to buy won’t be as frantic as buyers in 2013. That’s because there will be more inventory to choose from, less competition from investors, and somewhat looser mortgage credit in 2014.


3. Repeat buyers take center stage. 2013 was the year of the investor, but 2014 will be the year of the repeat homebuyer. As prices rise, buying homes will become less attractive to investors as well as first-time homebuyers, but repeat buyers will be able to offset the higher price of the home they buy with the higher price from the home they sell.

4. How much prices slow matters less than why and where. Home prices won’t rise as much in 2014 as in 2013, but mostly for healthy reasons such as more inventory and less investor activity. Where also matters: slowing prices are a relief in overvalued or unaffordable markets, but not in markets where many homeowners are still underwater.

5. Rental action swings back toward urban apartments. Investor purchases of single-family homes to rent will decline, but multifamily construction in 2013 will add to the supply of urban rentals in 2014. Urban apartments, not single-family homes, will be the first stop for many young adults when they finally move out of their parents’ homes and become renters.

© 2013 Florida Realtors®

Posted by

Nick & Cindy Davis

The Tampa Bay Real Estate Warriors
REMAX Premier Group
2719 SR 56
Wesley Chapel FL 33544 
813-300-7116 Direct
NickandCindyDavis@TampaHomesSold.com 
www.TampaHomesSold.com