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Dear clients, friends and family,

It is time to conclude the Year that has past, predict the New Year, and it is with good spirits that I am about to share this. In spite of gloom and doom of recent news reports on the state of the nation's housing, there is plenty of good news, the most recent of which comes from the National Association of Realtors.

Laurence Yun, the chief economist for NAR, had plenty of positive news for Realtors at last month's conference. Yun attributed much of today's sub prime mortgage problem to greed. Wall Street wanted the 10-12 percent return that sub prime mortgages yielded as opposed to the smaller returns from more traditional mortgage products. His take on the Wall Street types: "They gambled. They lost."

Yun's outlook for 2008 sees a shift from greedy speculators to serious homeowners. 2008 will be a year of opportunity where there will be serious, healthy business.

According to Yun, one of the biggest mistakes that reporters make is talking about national trends. Nationally, 2007 was the fifth best year ever on record. Home prices declined about 1.5 percent after a 50 percent run up in prices.

The challenge is that national numbers are pretty much irrelevant. I would argue that talking about national averages is about as effective as having a national weather forecast. Like the weather, all real estate markets are local. In fact, you may have a buyer's market and a seller's market operating within a single market area based exclusively upon price point. Here are the other key pieces of positive news from Yun's economic report:

1. New housing starts: Even though these are dropping, there was too much building in recent years. The market is simply adjusting to normal supply-and-demand pressures. The inventory is "being controlled which makes stabilization occur more quickly."

2. Foreclosures: According to Yun, the 41 percent increase in foreclosures has resulted primarily from investor-heavy real estate purchases in Arizona, California, Florida and Nevada. The majority of these individuals are flippers whose investments did not payoff. More importantly, the number of foreclosures in Utah, New Mexico, North Carolina and South Carolina is actually declining.

3. Under-priced markets and superstar cities: Although the coastal markets are still overpriced, Middle America is under priced. Nevertheless, Yun cites a new trend termed, "superstar" cities. These cities will command premium prices, regardless of what the market does. There is so much wealth concentrated in these areas, that measurements are simply not predictive. In addition to London, Paris, Tokyo and New York, Yun also identified San Francisco, Miami and Seattle as potential new superstar cities.

 

4. The recovery has started: Other than the three states hit heavily by job losses in the automotive industry (Indiana, Michigan and Ohio), the states that first experienced a downturn in the Northeast, are now in recovery. Specifically, Connecticut, Massachusetts, New York and Rhode Island were the first to feel the slump and are now well into a recovery. Furthermore, there appears to be a pent-up demand for first-time buyer properties due to a large number of Gen Y’s (born 1977 to 1994) that are now buying their first homes. Falling interest rates will motivate many of these buyers to step into the market now.

5. New jobs and corporate profits are still strong: Corporate profits are still strong with companies as diverse as Microsoft and Jack Daniels reporting close to record profits. Furthermore, the economy has generated 4 million net new jobs and wages are rising.

6. A weak dollar may harbinger more foreign investment in U.S. real estate
Although the decline of the U.S. dollar will end up costing us more when we go overseas or purchase imports, it has resulted in more manufacturing jobs returning to the
U.S. It also may mean more foreign investment in U.S. properties as well. Just a few years ago, the Canadian dollar was only worth 70 cents in U.S. currency. Today, the Canadian dollar has been hovering at about $1.05 to $1.10 U.S. What this means is that we can expect more Canadians and Europeans to be purchasing U.S. property, because our prices are approximately 50 percent cheaper than they were just three years ago.

7. Real estate: Still the best shelter: For those agents who represent reluctant first-time buyers, Yun points to some interesting research from the Federal Reserve. Between 1995 and 2004, the average renter accumulated $4,000 in wealth. In contrast, the average homeowner accumulated $184,400. Furthermore, the typical homeowner holds their property for six years. Within this period of time, NAR's research shows that approximately 97 percent of the homeowners will have a positive equity position after that period of time.

Bottom line: 2008 represents the best window that buyers will have to find excellent deals with excellent financing. Get the word out there. For those who wait, prices and interest rates will be higher and the reluctant buyer may be forced out of the market.

 

Concluding, I want to wish you a Happy, Healthy and Prosperous Year!

 

Charlotte

The Connecticut Real Estate Market Report

October 22, 2007

If you were scanning media coverage in 2007, this is some of what you saw: Sell your home; values are dropping. Don’t sell your home now; it won’t sell. You can’t get a mortgage. Mortgages will cost more. The economy is in recession. There is a 50/50 chance of a recession. Oil prices rise to record highs. Consumer confidence drops. The common theme was clearly, “The sky is falling, run for cover.”

 

How accurate are consumer opinions and forecasts? Consumer confidence surveys measure how we look at the outside world and what we think is going to happen. When we project our thoughts into the future, they are based on what we know of the past and present. If all we have read is negative, then of course our predictions are grim.

Consumer confidence surveys are the reason the following paradigm is important: bad news generates more bad news and good news generates more good news. If I’ve learned anything from analyzing years of real estate and financial markets, it is this.


“There is less inventory and houses that are priced
right are definitely selling.”

 

Headlines use sensational words such as “plummet, crash, burst,” etc., when the body of the story actually contains some good news. So, what is reality?


The market data for all the towns and counties in Connecticut appears in this market report for all of 2007 and 2006. It is worth reviewing carefully.

 

2007 Real Estate Market Summary

In Connecticut, there were 13 percent fewer home sales in 2007 than there were 2006. Is this great news? Not really. But it doesn’t mean houses aren’t selling. There is less inventory, and houses that are priced right are definitely selling. Ask some of the 40,000 plus single-family and condo owners who sold a home in Connecticut in 2007.

What about prices?

Connecticut is a high-priced state, because our residents are among the highest income earners in the nation. And as an aside, despite national news stories extolling the poor rate of savings in our nation, Connecticut has the highest personal saving rate in the United States.


Median sales prices generally showed modest increases in 2007. Days on the market do not show dramatic increases. Generally, market times are a bit higher (by 8 percent) but are certainly not excessive at 125 days.

 

One area of our real estate market that does show some weakness is new residential permits. After reaching a peak of 10,300 annual permits in the past decade, there were only about 6,900 new permits in 2007 — down from 8,100 in 2006. (We do not have the final numbers at the time this is being written).

Frankly, if this pattern continues,
we will very likely experience a shortage of new homes on the market in the not too distant future.

 

Looking Ahead

The health of the real estate market is dependent on the health of our economy, and conversely, the real estate market is a key factor in the health of the economy. The economic news is mixed. Mortgage interest rates remain low by historic standards and may very well go lower this year, which is always good news for the real estate market. In fact, if we look at the historical performance of the real estate market, the stronger performance levels coincide with the lower mortgage interest rates. No surprises here.


There has also been more good news that was overshadowed by the gloomy stories of 2007. Some major employers relocated or brought facilities to Connecticut. We have regained all of the jobs in our state that were lost in the depression of the early ‘90s. Mortgages are still available and attainable. What has gone away is the real risky sub-prime loan, and it’s about time it did.

 

Connecticut achieved 87 percent of last year’s sales numbers with an overall modest price increase.


The fact that Connecticut achieved 87 percent of last year’s sales numbers with an overall modest price increase is not likely to capture headlines. We can’t predict when the market will “turn around.” Nobody can. But what could happen is that we will find ourselves with insufficient inventory in the market for homebuyers. If enough people believe “the sky is falling,” perception could become reality.

Prepared by Charlotte Stichter & Barry Rosa
Vice President of New Homes & Land/Specialty Markets






 

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*Prepared by Barry Rosa
Vice President of New Homes & Land/Specialty Markets