More Good News
Green Energy

More Good News


Guess which city is number 5 on the list?

Friends of ours 2 doors down bought their home for around $200K about 4 years ago. He is an active duty career Marine. She is a former Marine Corps nurse.

In July they were transferred to North Carolina.

Anticipating the move, they put their home for sale a year ago at about what they bought it for.

It is still for sale and the price has been reduced to $144,500.

With few showings and no takers.

24/7 Wall St.:

Cities Where Homes Will Not Sell

The number of homes listed for sale in the largest cities in the country has fallen 20% in the past year, according to a report released last week by Realtor.com. While the number of homes on the market has dropped around the country, the average number of days that listed homes have been on the market has remained the same: 107 days. 24/7 Wall St. has identified the 10 cities where homes are on the market for the longest time.

When it comes to the housing crisis, foreclosures and home prices often dominate the headlines. Other information, however, is just as important to a complete understanding of the crisis. Chief among these are the amount of time homes are on the market and whether the total inventory of available homes has changed. These are better indications of supply and demand than any other data.


Wilmington, N.C., tops the list with houses remaining on the market for 164 days. That compares to a city in bad shape, like Detroit, where the number is only 65 days. Wilmington’s figure is not necessarily a bad sign. A city where listed homes have been on the market for a long period may be one where many home owners still believe there is a chance they can make a sale. Detroit’s figure is probably low because people are no longer listing their homes for sale due to a lengthy and depressed housing market.

The one figure that does, often, coincide closely with high number of days on market is foreclosures. In eight of the 10 cities where homes are on the market for the longest period, foreclosures were at or well above the national average. Clearly, people who must sell their homes keep them on the market as long as they can. Eventually, particularly in cities with many days on market, the ability of these home owners to pay their mortgage runs out.

Another reason that homes in many of these cities have been on the market for so long is that they are among those that had rapid population growth between 1990 and 2010. This caused a rapid expansion of inventory. The cities became overbuilt as the housing crisis began to drive up foreclosures, particularly among homes with subprime mortgages.

Notable among the cities that added large numbers of people are Tallahassee. The population of the Florida state capital rose over 20% from 1990 to 2000 and another 20% from 2000 to 2010, according to the Census Bureau. West Palm Beach grew even more rapidly over the same 20 years. Gainesville grew by 30% from 2000 to 2010. Florida, which has five cities on this list, has the second highest foreclosure rate of any state, trailing only Nevada, according to RealtyTrac. Florida’s population rose by approximately 30% each decade from 1970 through 2010.

The most obvious sign that the housing market has begun to recover will be when prices begin to rise and foreclosures abate. There will be other signals. Days on market for homes may actually rise for some period nationwide. Home owners seeing a market recovery will put their homes on the market. As a consequence, inventory will rise. The real test of a recovery will be how quickly this increased inventory eventually will fall.

In order to identify the cities where homes stay on the market the longest, 24/7 looked at pricing and listing data provided by Realtor.com. For these cities, we identified whether the number of homes available increased or decreased, as well as how much prices have changed during that period. We also included most recent foreclosure rates provided by Realtytrac, and compared those to the national average. . . .

5. Reading, Pa.

> Time on market: 147 days
> Change in # of listings: -11.95% (100th largest)
> Median list price: $184,900 (69th)
> Foreclosure rate: 1 in every 771 homes

Reading is in the old industrial section of Pennsylvania, which runs between Allentown and Harrisburg. The city has nearly 90,000 residents and is among the poorest cities in the U.S. median income for the city is only $28,098. Reading topped the list of cities with more than 65,000 people with the highest proportion of residents living in poverty, according to the New York Times, a fact that will continue to hurt Reading’s housing market for the foreseeable future.

. . .

These are the 10 U.S. cities where homes will not sell




-
There are many days when walking away and mailing in the keys is sorely tempting. Maybe the kid in Alaska would take me in? Another demographic I wish I didn't belong to: MSNBC: One in three mortgage holders still underwater ...

- No Depression
I'm shocked etc. CNBC: Realtors: We Overcounted Home Sales for Five Years Data on sales of previously owned U.S. homes from 2007 through October this year will be revised down next week because of double counting, indicating a much weaker housing...

- Wreckovery
CNBC: Stubborn Jobless Claims Still Keep On Climbing Higher New U.S. claims for unemployment benefits unexpectedly climbed to 424,000 last week from a revised 414,000 in the prior week, pointing to a painfully slow improvement in the nation's job...

- No Depression
WaPo: U.S. new-home sales unexpectedly fall to lowest on record By Alex Kowalski, Wednesday, March 23, 10:24 AM March 23 (Bloomberg) -- Purchases of new U.S. homes unexpectedly declined in February to the slowest pace on record and prices dropped to the...

- Wreckovery!
Newsmax: 2011 to Top 2010 Record of 1 Million Foreclosures Thursday, 13 Jan 2011 01:31 PM NEW YORK (AP) — The bleakest year in the foreclosure crisis has only just begun. Lenders are poised to take back more homes this year than any other since the...



Green Energy








.