Monthly Archives: November 2012

Case-Shiller Makes it Official: “We are Now in the Midst of a Recovery” | Pound Ridge NY Real Estate

Two of the nation’s most authoritative national housing price indices today reported significant third quarter price increases over last year at this time, and the chairman of the Index Committee at S&P Dow Jones Indices confirmed that a housing recover is underway.

The S&P/Case-Shiller U.S. National Home Price Index recorded a 3.6 percent gain in the third quarter of 2012 over the third quarter of 2011, marking the sixth consecutive month of increasing prices. In September 2012, the 10- and 20-City Composites posted annual increases of 2.1percent and 3.0 percent, respectively.

Federal Housing Finance Agency’s (FHFA) seasonally adjusted purchase-only house price index reported today that deasonally adjusted house prices rose 4.0 percent from the third quarter of 2011 to the third quarter of 2012. FHFA’s seasonally adjusted monthly index for September was up 0.2 percent from August.prices and rose 1.1 percent from the second quarter to the third quarter of 2012.

With significant growth in home prices during the quarter and a modest inventory of homes available for sale, house price movements in the third quarter were similar to what we observed in the spring,” said FHFA Principal Economist Andrew Leventis. “The past year has seen consistent price increases, but a number of factors continue to affect the recovery in home prices such as stagnant income growth, high unemployment levels, lingering uncertainty about the macroeconomy, and the large number of homes in the foreclosure pipeline.”

FHFA’s expanded-data house price index, a metric introduced in August 2011 that adds transactions information from county recorder offices and the Federal Housing Administration to the HPI data sample, rose 1.0 percent over the latest quarter. Over the latest four quarters,the index is up 3.3 percent. For individual states, price changes reflected in the expanded-datameasure and the traditional purchase-only HPI are compared on pages 21-23 of this report.

Average home prices in the S&P/Case-Shiller 10- and 20-City Composites were each up by 0.3 percent in September versus August 2012. Seventeen of the 20 MSAs and both Composites posted better annual returns in September versus August 2012; Detroit and Washington D.C. recorded a slight deceleration in their annual rates, and New York saw no change.

The 10- and 20-City Case-Shiller Composites have posted positive annual returns for four consecutive months with a +2.1 percent and +3.0 percent annual change in September, respectively. Month-over-month, both Composites have recorded increases for six consecutive months, with the most recent monthly gain being +0.3 percent for each Composite.

“In September’s report all three headline composites and 17 of the 20 cities gained over their levels of a year ago. Month-over-month, 13 cities and both Composites posted positive monthly gains. says David M. Blitzer, Chairman of the Index Committee at S&P Dow Jones Indices.

“We are entering the seasonally weak part of the year.  The headline figures, which are not seasonally adjusted, showed five cities with lower prices in September versus only one in August; in the seasonally adjusted data the pattern was reversed: one city fell in September versus two in August. Despite the seasons, housing continues to improve.

Blitzer said Phoenix continues to lead the recovery with a +20.4 percent annual growth rate. Atlanta has finally reversed 26 months of annual declines with a +0.1 percent annual rate as observed in September’s housing data. At the other end of the spectrum, Chicago and New York were the only two cities to post annual declines of 1.5 percent and 2.3 percent respectively and were also down 0.6 percent and 0.1 percent month-over-month.

“Thirteen of the 20 cities recorded positive monthly returns; Boston, Charlotte, Chicago, Cleveland and New York saw modest drops in home prices in September as compared to August; Tampa and Washington D.C. were flat. With six months of consistently rising home prices, it is safe to say that we are now in the midst of a recovery in the housing market.”

As of the third quarter of 2012, average home prices across the United States are back at their mid-2003 levels.  At the end of the third quarter of 2012, the National Index was up 2.2 percent over the second quarter of 2012 and 3.6% above the third quarter of 2011.

As of September 2012, average home prices across the United States for the 10-City and 20-City Composites are back to their autumn 2003 levels. Measured from their June/July 2006 peaks, the decline for both Composites is approximately 29 percent through September 2012. For both Composites, the September 2012 levels are approximately 9 percent above their recent lows seen in March 2012.

In September 2012, 13 MSAs and both Composites posted positive monthly gains. Home prices in Tampa and Washington DC saw no change from August to September. Boston, Charlotte, Chicago, Cleveland and New York saw a slight drop in prices in September. Phoenix recorded the highest increase in annual rate, up 20.4% from its September 2011 level. Chicago and New York were the only two cities that fared worse year-over-year with respective annual rates of -1.5% and -2.3 percent.

The table below summarizes the results for September 2012.

2012 Q32012 Q3/2012 Q22012 Q2/2012 Q1
LevelChange (%)Change (%)1-Year Change (%)
U.S. National Index135.672.2%7.1%3.6%
September 2012September/AugustAugust/July
Metropolitan AreaLevelChange (%)Change (%)1-Year Change (%)
Atlanta96.060.3%1.8%0.1%
Boston157.26-0.6%0.7%1.9%
Charlotte116.28-0.3%0.6%3.5%
Chicago116.69-0.6%0.7%-1.5%
Cleveland102.10-0.9%1.0%1.4%
Dallas121.570.2%0.1%4.4%
Denver134.010.4%0.5%6.7%
Detroit79.820.7%2.1%7.6%
Las Vegas97.381.4%1.6%3.8%
Los Angeles174.801.0%1.3%4.0%
Miami150.240.1%1.0%7.4%
Minneapolis126.021.1%1.2%8.8%
New York166.10-0.1%0.6%-2.3%
Phoenix120.651.1%1.8%20.4%
Portland141.100.2%0.5%3.7%
San Diego160.091.4%0.9%4.1%
San Francisco143.150.5%0.5%7.5%
Seattle142.090.3%-0.1%4.8%
Tampa134.900.0%0.4%5.9%
Washington192.360.0%0.5%3.2%
Composite-10158.930.3%0.8%2.1%
Composite-20146.220.3%0.8%3.0%
Source: S&P Dow Jones Indices and Fiserv
Data through September 2012

Since its launch in early 2006, the S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Indices have published, and the markets have followed and reported on, the non-seasonally adjusted data set used in the headline indices. For analytical purposes, S&P Dow Jones Indices publishes a seasonally adjusted data set covered in the headline indices, as well as for the 17 of 20 markets with tiered price indices and the five condo markets that are tracked.

A summary of the monthly changes using the seasonally adjusted (SA) and non-seasonally adjusted (NSA) data can be found in the table below.

2012 Q3/2012 Q22012 Q2/2012 Q1
NSASANSASA
US National2.2%1.1%7.1%2.4%
September/August Change (%)August/July Change (%)
Metropolitan AreaNSASANSASA
Atlanta0.3%1.7%1.8%1.7%
Boston-0.6%0.1%0.7%0.5%
Charlotte-0.3%0.4%0.6%0.4%
Chicago-0.6%-0.7%0.7%-0.1%
Cleveland-0.9%0.6%1.0%0.3%
Dallas0.2%1.0%0.1%0.2%
Denver0.4%1.0%0.5%0.2%
Detroit0.7%0.4%2.1%0.5%
Las Vegas1.4%1.1%1.6%0.8%
Los Angeles1.0%0.8%1.3%1.0%
Miami0.1%0.3%1.0%0.4%
Minneapolis1.1%1.0%1.2%0.4%
New York-0.1%0.3%0.6%0.0%
Phoenix1.1%1.3%1.8%1.4%
Portland0.2%0.7%0.5%0.4%
San Diego1.4%1.7%0.9%0.7%
San Francisco0.5%1.0%0.5%0.1%
Seattle0.3%0.5%-0.1%-0.2%
Tampa0.0%0.0%0.4%0.2%
Washington0.0%0.1%0.5%0.0%
Composite-100.3%0.3%0.8%0.3%
Composite-200.3%0.4%0.8%0.4%
Source: S&P Dow Jones Indices and Fiserv
Data through September 2012

House Poor: Just Another Learning Experience | Armonk NY Real Estate

House Poor:

Just Another Learning Experience

By Homer Guthrie

Expert Homeowner

Have you ever had that free-falling feeling, like someone has blindfolded you, pushed you out of an airplane door at 5,000 feet and all you can do is scream at the top of your lungs and wonder how long it will take before you hit the ground?

That’s what buying a foreclosure felt like.

I was counting on my real estate team, Bea Meriwether, my real estate agent, and Earnest S. Crowe, my mortgage guy, to guide me through the process. After all, they were the ones who had talked me into it. They said I would make eight percent or better and I would learn a lot. They were half right.

Bea had her eye on a sweet little bank-owned split-level not far from my home in Mirage Mills, a suburb widely known as the Chernobyl of American real estate because we live in the epicenter of the foreclosure crisis. I had to close out my 401K to pay for it and by the time the check arrived, the house was gone. So Ernest had another idea.

“Let’s play poker with the big boys,” he winked at me. “That’s where the real deals are.”

That didn’t sound like a very good idea to me. I’m a terrible poker player. When I try to bluff, my voice turns squeaky and gives me away.

Ernest’s “real deals” would be at the next sheriff’s auction of foreclosures, a popular event in Mirage Mills. In most counties, sheriff’s auctions are just a few guys meeting outside a courthouse once a month. But in Mirage Mills, dozens of people show up to watch serious investors spend tens of thousands of dollars on foreclosures they had seen only from the street. Most of the crowd consists of carpenters, plumbers, electricians, roofers and landscapers hoping to get hired to fix the messes that the new owners will soon discover.

Ernest got a list of the foreclosures to be in the next auction and the three of us toured the houses up for bid. To my way of thinking, if you’ve seen one house with a line of laundry out the back because the dryer is busted and a dirt yard packed hard by little bare feet and blistering sun, you’ve probably seen them all. Bea and Ernest, on the other hand, unanimously felt that 12765 Prosperity Way was the deal of the day, bound to make some smart guy a potful of money. The way they added it up on my kitchen table, I was going do a whole lot better than eight percent.

So when the big day came, I was standing at the courthouse steps with a cashier’s check for nearly all the money I had to my name. Both Bea and Ernest and other appointments that morning and were late. Felicity went to get coffee, leaving me alone with several other guys in the middle of the crowd, when a county bureaucrat appeared and started rattling off case numbers and addresses from a clipboard. When nobody bid on any of the homes, they all went “back to the beneficiary,” whatever that meant. Things got boring. I really needed Felicia’s coffee.

Suddenly the bureaucrat said “Prosperity Way.” My nerves kicked into overdrive. I knew my team would kill me if I missed this house.

She read the opening bid, which was the minimum amount the bank would take for the foreclosure and looked up.

“First bid?” she asked.

“Yes, please!” I squeaked as loudly as I could squeak.

At that very moment a police car sped past the courthouse with its siren blaring. She didn’t hear me even though I was less than ten feet away.

The siren was still sounding when she asked, “Second bid?”

A big man in sunglasses standing right next to her silently raised two fingers like he was Winston Churchill. Obviously, he was a regular who knew the secret code.

“Mr. Cameron bids two hundred thousand. Last bid. Anyone else?” she asked and quickly looked around. “No?”

Desperate to be heard, I pushed my way in front of her and squeaked into her face so loudly that she had to notice me. No sense playing around with a pro like Cameron, so I bid the limit we had agreed upon. “Two fifty!”

Cameron took off his dark glasses, gave me a peeved look, laughed sarcastically and muttered “You gotta be kidding me.” He shook his head at both me and the county bureaucrat to indicate he was done. She acknowledged me at last. She asked for my cashiers’ check, took down my name and address, and gave me a receipt and some paperwork. I was the proud owner of a foreclosure that was going to change my life in ways I couldn’t imagine.

I stepped away from the circle of bidders and sighed. It felt good to best the big boys at their own game. Just then Felicity arrived with the coffee. As we sat on a bench and sipped, I told her the good news. Instead of being pleased she was concerned that I had spent so much, so I described my fierce bidding war with Cameron and how I crushed him into dust. “He wanted it sooooo bad,” I gloated. “That pretty much confirms that we got a great deal.”

“Oh, my God,” she shouted suddenly when she read the receipt. “No, you didn’t!”

“Didn’t what?”

“Homer, please dear God in heaven please tell me this is not the house you bought.”

“All sales are final. Why?”

“You didn’t buy 12765 Prosperity Way. This is a receipt for 12675. Oh, Homer, that’s ten blocks away from the house we wanted!”

Housing Market Propels Economy | Cross River Realtor

The U.S. housing market, which plunged the economy into recession five years ago and was a persistent drag on the recovery, is now a key economic driver at a time when other sectors are slowing.

Economists project U.S. gross domestic product growth will slow in the final three months of the year from the sluggish 2% annual rate in the third quarter. Businesses, unnerved by the prospect of federal tax increases and spending cuts known as the “fiscal cliff” taking effect in January, have slowed their pace of investment spending. Defense spending also is expected to slow, further weighing on growth.

But while those economic pillars weaken, an improving housing market is buoying consumers’ spirits and giving the economy its biggest lift since the real-estate boom. Macroeconomic Advisers projects the economy will grow at a 1.4% annual rate in the fourth quarter, with housing contributing 0.4 percentage point. IHS Global Insight is projecting a 1% growth rate, with housing contributing 0.53 of a percentage point—the largest contribution since 2005.

“Housing seems unfazed by the uncertainty that is plaguing other parts of the economy,” said Ben Herzon, an economist with Macroeconomic Advisers.

The real-estate recovery is just beginning, of course, and housing’s role in the overall economy remains diminished by five years of rising foreclosures and falling prices. New loans aren’t easy to come by as lenders grapple with distressed mortgages. Millions of homeowners owe more than their property is worth. Still, housing’s steady improvement is “going to offset some of the slowdown in manufacturing, and it is one of the reasons we think we’re likely not to see a double-dip recession,” said Doug Duncan, chief economist at Fannie Mae FNMA -1.79% .

Home prices rose 3.6% in September from a year ago, according to the S&P/Case-Shiller National Index out Tuesday. Prices are up 7% through the first nine months of 2012, which is the strongest rise since 2005 and puts prices on a trajectory to beat even the most optimistic forecasts from earlier this year. The gains also are broad-based, with the 20 cities tracked by the Case-Shiller index—except Chicago and New York—showing year-over-year gains.

The housing turnaround has been a boon for real-estate brokers and home builders, some of whom have seen their stock prices more than double this year. Retailers have seen a new stream of customers ready to decorate, furnish and upgrade their homes while investors are splashing out at hardware stores to renovate previously foreclosed homes. Banks, meantime, have posted record mortgage profits amid high refinance volumes and stronger demand for new loans.

Beyond those direct benefits are a number of indirect effects. Rising home values make homeowners feel better about their finances—making them more likely to spend and, with interest rates low, more comfortable about taking on debt. An index of confidence released Tuesday by the Conference Board rose to 73.7 in November, the highest level since February 2008.

“Housing’s share belies its importance to the economy,” said Joseph LaVorgna, chief U.S. economist at Deutsche Bank DBK.XE +2.32% . “The confidence effects are massive.”

Rising home prices are making consumers feel flush, which may eventually spur them to spend more: New home-equity lines of credit are projected to grow by 22% this year to $77 billion, a three-year high, according to Moody’s MCO -1.18% Analytics. “We can start to see the housing market as an assist to our growth rather than an anchor,” said Frank Blake, chief executive of retailer Home Depot Inc. HD -0.34% on an earnings call this month.

Rising home values have given Clara Soh confidence about her finances—and she is spending accordingly. The 35-year-old senior director at a pharmaceuticals trade group has spent the past five years saving more and spending less. With interest rates low, she recently refinanced a Portland, Ore., home that she has been renting out since her recent move to Washington, D.C. That lowered her payment by $300 a month—while the home has gained $100,000 in value. Now she plans to pay off her 30-year mortgage early and splurge a little: She recently spent $300 on clothes, $1,000 on climbing gear, and $700 on a new bike. “I feel a little more confident about the direction things are going. I have a little more of a cushion,” she said.

While rising prices now are driving the housing market forward, that couldn’t have happened without a painful cycle of losses. Lower prices and rock-bottom interest rates have boosted affordability. The average monthly mortgage payment on a median-price home in October, assuming a 10% down payment, fell to $720 at prevailing rates, down from nearly $1,270 at the end of 2005.

Rising rents and an uptick in household formation have ignited demand, which, in turn, has pushed inventories of homes for sale to their lowest level in at least a decade. The upshot: More buyers are chasing fewer homes, pushing up prices.

“Consumers are trying to find a house to buy and they can’t,” said Ivy Zelman, chief executive of research firm Zelman & Associates. In Phoenix, Maracay Homes WY 0.00% sold out four of its 12 developments this year and will add 10 new ones over the next six months. At Whispering Heights, a Maracay development in Chandler, Ariz., that courts move-up buyers with homes priced from $250,000, the company sold as many as 10 homes a month, up from three a month last year. They sold out in October.

Armonk Sales up 16% – Prices down 15% | RobReportBlog | Armonk NY Real Estate Report

Armonk Sales up 16% –  Prices down 15%  | RobReportBlogArmonk NY Real Estate Report  –  last six months

2012

50                       homes sold

$890,000       median sales price

$150,000       low

$3,753,750    high

3479                  ave. size

$329                  ave. price per foot

196                     ave. days on market

93.66%              ave. sold to ask price

$1,136,011      ave. sold price

Housing Prices Keep Slow, Steady Climb Up: Case-Shiller | Armonk Real Estate

Home prices increased in September in most major U.S. cities, more evidence of a housing recovery that is providing a lift to the fragile economy.

Sold sign

The Standard & Poor’s/Case Shiller national index measuring prices in 20 cities rose 3 percent in September compared with the same month a year ago. Prices also gained 3.6 percent in the July-September quarter compared with the same quarter in 2011. (Read More: Yes, Housing Starts Surge, but Rentals Are the Drivers)

Across the nation, prices increased in 18 of 20 cities.

Phoenix prices jumped 20.4 percent over that stretch to lead all cities. Prices in Atlanta showed a modest 0.1 percent increase, ending 26 straight consecutive year-over-year declines.

Prices also rose in September from August in 13 cities. Five metro regions posted declines, and two were unchanged. Monthly prices are not seasonally adjusted.

8 states where ‘repair and deduct’ could spark eviction | Katonah Real Estate

Q: Our landlord has refused to fix our heater, despite our repeated requests. We’d fix it ourselves, but we can’t afford it. In fact, we’re down to one income and are behind in the rent. The landlord says if we fix it ourselves and deduct the cost from our rent bill, he’ll evict us. Is this legal? –Dale and Candace

A: In every state but Arkansas, residential landlords are required to offer and maintain fit and habitable housing. While a handful limit the guarantee to certain types of tenancies (excluding portions of the guarantee for single-family dwellings, for example), most simply extend the warranty to all tenancies. But that doesn’t mean that all tenants, at every moment, can call upon its protections.

In fact, at least eight states condition a tenant’s right to get action from the landlord on the tenant not being delinquent in rent at the time the tenant gives notice to the landlord of the problem. In Delaware, Massachusetts, Missouri, Nevada, New Hampshire, Texas, West Virginia and Wyoming, tenants cannot avail themselves of some typical remedies — withholding the rent, using “repair and deduct,” or moving out without liability for rent — unless they’re current in the rent.

The policy behind this rule is pretty straightforward — it’s to discourage tenants from staying rent-free while they manufacture habitability problems and fight an eviction. Although the vast majority of tenants do not engage in such behavior, publicized stories of “tenants from hell” who manage to stay in the property while the landlord spends time and money trying to evict them have gotten legislators’ attention.

You’ll need to find out where your state stands on the issue, before you can confidently fix the heater and lower your rent obligation. If you live in one of the states mentioned above, your landlord may indeed have grounds to punish your exercise of a remedy that would otherwise be available to you.

Q: I’ve just learned that one of my tenants was arrested for assault last week. The incident took place in a city park. Can I terminate the tenancy on this basis? –Andre Z.

A: Several states have laws that allow landlords to terminate tenancies when the tenant has committed certain illegal acts. (Many states also allow for termination when there’s an act of domestic violence, but that’s not exactly what you’re asking about.) These laws vary considerably when it comes to what kinds of acts will justify a termination, and how much proof is needed by the landlord.

It’s most common for states to allow termination when the acts affect the health or safety of other residents or tenants. For example, Iowa’s provision targets acts that threaten the safety of the landlord, landlord’s employee, other tenants, or anyone within 1,000 feet of the property. (Iowa Code Section 562A.27A.)

But not all states are similarly limiting — in Tennessee, for example, the landlord can terminate if the tenant “willfully or intentionally commits a violent act,” no matter where it might have occurred. (Tenn. Code Section 66-28-517.)

So you’ll need to check your state law to see whether it gives you the right to terminate under the circumstances. You’ll also need to find out whether the tenant must be convicted of the offense first, or whether you can terminate based on the arrest alone.

Dollar’s decline may boost real estate | Pound Ridge Real Estate

Whether you are thrilled and overjoyed at the results — or wearing sackcloth and rending your hair — the results of this month’s elections were, shall we say, sobering for the Republican party.

Not only did President Obama win re-election, but the Democrats strengthened their hold on the Senate, in a political environment that nearly everybody thought was disadvantageous to Democrats. An election that most talking heads thought would be razor-thin turned out to be as close a contest as Oregon vs. USC.

Since you’re reading this on Inman, your primary concern is what the election portends for real estate.

Fortunately for us, Lawrence Yun, the chief economist for the National Association of Realtors, fielded some great questions on this very topic from NAR’s director of digital engagement, Nobu Hata. Unfortunately for us, Dr. Yun’s answers seem somewhat contradictory and therefore require further bloviatings from op/ed columnists such as yours truly.

Words of wisdom

First, Yun states that the housing market is recovering at a decent pace, and that industry revenues should be about 15 percent higher going forward. Sweet!

But Yun also sounds some warnings about pullbacks in both government spending and the piling up of student debt.

Again on a positive note, Yun notes that some 4.5 million jobs have been created in the past three years. But the pace of job growth has been slow, and the fall in unemployment rate is due to people simply leaving the labor force. So ultimately, we’re just treading water.

Yun then speaks specifically about the election results, and says that NAR’s main concern is to prevent legislation harmful to housing and promote legislation helpful to housing.

I don’t know about you, but… that interview leaves me even more unsettled. Maybe I was hoping for a lot more Hopium, but I’m not getting a lot of warm and fuzzies from Dr. Yun’s words.

That fiscal cliff thingy

Let’s begin with the single biggest change in the political scene after the election: the Republican House prepares to cave.

The New York Times reported that Speaker John Boehner, who immediately after the election said he would accept “new revenues under the right circumstances,” is whipping the House into compliance. Republicans still control the House and will staunchly oppose tax rate increases, but Boehner warned members of his party that they’ll have to avoid the nasty showdowns of the last two years — implying that there’s room for compromise on raising revenue by closing tax loopholes.

With the “fiscal cliff” looming by the end of the year, everyone and his grandmother knows that something must be done. What might that be?

Clearly, taxes on the rich are going up. In his first post-election speech, President Obama made that clear.

Although Obama didn’t mention an increase in “tax rates,” the White House later made clear that the president will veto any bill that extends the current tax rates for those earning more than $250,000.

So taxes are going up for the wealthy. But that would bring in only about $82 billion a year. Since the 2012 deficit was $1.1 trillion, the boys and girls in D.C. are going to have to find more money from somewhere.

Enter the mortgage interest deduction.

Speaker Boehner has been repeating the mantra of “closing loopholes and deductions” instead of raising tax rates. What are these “loopholes and deductions”?

According to the Joint Committee on Taxation (via the Washington Post), the top five “tax expenditures” (meaning, taxes not collected, which equals an expenditure in D.C.-speak) are:

  • Exclusion for employer-provided health-care – 13 percent
  • Home mortgage interest deduction – 9 percent
  • Preferential rates for dividends and capital gains – 8 percent
  • Exclusion of Medicare benefits – 7 percent
  • Net exclusion of defined benefit pension contributions/earnings – 6 percent

    At 9 percent, the mortgage interest deduction amounts to some $80 billion a year in lost revenues, which is about the same amount of money that the Obama administration wants to raise by taxing the wealthy.

    Since there is a greater chance that the Jets will win the Superbowl this year than there is of the federales making people pay incomes taxes on healthcare benefits provided by employers, or making seniors pay taxes on Medicare benefits, it’s probably time to kiss the mortgage interest deduction — at least as we know it today — goodbye.

    That jobs thing

    Yun also laments the state of the employment picture, suggesting that we’re just treading water.

    Well, we may not even be treading water anymore. As noted by TheBlaze.com, the following companies announced layoffs and office/plant closings within 48 hours of the election:

    Westinghouse, Research in Motion Ltd., Lightyear Network Solutions, Providence Journal, Hawker Beechcraft, Boeing (30 percent of their management – gone), CVPH Medical Center, U.S. Cellular, Momentive Performance Materials, Rocketdyne, Brake Parts, Vestas Wind Systems, Husqvarna, Center for Hospice New York, Bristol Meyers, OCE North America, Darden Restaurants, United Blood Services, Welch Allyn, Dana Holding Corp., Stryker, Boston Scientific, Medtronic, Smith & Nephew, Abbott Labs, Covidien, Kinetic Concepts, St. Jude Medical, Hill Rom, Caterpillar, Albrecht Sentry Foods, Target, Millennium Academy, KMart, The Andover Gift Shop, Grand Union Family Markets, Movie Scene, TE Connectivity (closing its Greensboro plant with 620 layoffs expected), Fresh Market, AGC Glass North America, The Roses, Meanders Kitchen, Harley-Davidson, Townsend Booksellers.

    And as you may have heard, Applebees and Papa Johns were reportedly facing boycotts for their stances on job cuts.

    Hmm. Well, here’s to hoping for the best, that all of these are just temporary blips on the forward march to job growth and prosperity!

    Real estate recovery

    All is not gloom and doom, however. In the short-term, as Dr. Yun said, housing market is likely to continue its recovery, at least in terms of price if not transactions, since low inventory is plaguing most markets. He’s projecting increased revenues of 15 percent for the industry. I think it’s likely to be quite a bit higher at least for the next several months.

    Why? If the economic picture is gloomy at best, why would real estate recover?

    In October, Bill Gross of PIMCO, the world’s largest bond fund, wrote in an Investment Outlook:

    “How can the U.S. not be considered the first destination of global capital in search of safe (although historically low) returns? Easy answer: It will not be if we continue down the current road and don’t address our ‘fiscal gap.’ IF we continue to close our eyes to existing 8 percent of GDP deficits, which when including Social Security, Medicaid and Medicare liabilities compose an average estimated 11 percent annual ‘fiscal gap,’ then we will begin to resemble Greece before the turn of the next decade. Unless we begin to close this gap, then the inevitable result will be that our debt/GDP ratio will continue to rise, the Fed would print money to pay for the deficiency, inflation would follow and the dollar would inevitably decline. Bonds would be burned to a crisp and stocks would certainly be singed; only gold and real assets would thrive within the ‘Ring of Fire.’ “

    “Only gold and real assets would thrive within the ‘Ring of Fire.’ ” Hooray for real estate!

    Since raising taxes on the wealthy and eliminating the mortgage interest deduction would take our deficit from $1.1 trillion or so to only about $940 billion or so, I’m guessing that dollar devaluation will continue and that investors and savvy consumers know it.

    Demand for real assets, like a house or an apartment building, will not only continue to be strong, but I suspect will rise over the next several months. Anyone who’s still got enough cash for a down payment should immediately buy a house on as long-term a fixed-rate mortgage he can get, since he’ll be repaying the loan with devalued dollars and house prices have nowhere to go but up, in dollar terms (though I suspect they will actually fall in real terms, if denominated in gold, for example).

    So, expect a great fourth quarter, and maybe even a great first half of 2013, depending on what comes out of Washington D.C. over the next few weeks. Fortunately, NAR is pretty good at keeping on top of what’s going down in policyland with blogs and newsletters and Calls to Action and whatnot. Unfortunately, you all are gonna have to actually give a damn and pay attention to those things.

    Such is the price of success going forward.

    It simply cannot be debated now, if it was ever debatable, that Washington D.C. will be far more important for your business success or failure than San Francisco or Seattle are. Invest your time and money accordingly.