US house price fall 'beats Great Depression slide'
by Stephen Foley
The ailing US housing market passed a grim
milestone in the first quarter of this year, posting a further
deterioration that means the fall in house prices is now greater than
that suffered during the Great Depression.
The brief recovery in prices in 2009, spurred by
government aid to first-time buyers, has now been entirely snuffed out,
and the average American home now costs 33 per cent less than it did at
the peak of the housing bubble in 2007. The peak-to-trough fall in house
prices in the 1930s Depression was 31 per cent – and prices took 19
years to recover after that downturn.
The latest Case-Shiller house price index was just
one of a slew of disappointing economic data from the US yesterday,
which suggested ebbing confidence in the recovery of the world's largest
economy. The Chicago PMI manufacturing index showed a sharp slowdown in
the pace of expansion in May, missing Wall Street forecasts and sending
the index to its lowest since November 2009.
And
in the latest Conference Board consumer confidence survey more people
expressed uncertainty over their future economic prospects. The
confidence index fell unexpectedly to 60.8 from a revised 66.0, when
economists had expected it to rise to 67.0. Falling house prices and
negative equity combined with high petrol and food prices and a
still-weak jobs market to raise consumers' fears for the future.
Thomas
Di Galoma, the managing director of government securities at
Oppenheimer & Co, said: "Based on the weakness in housing prices,
Chicago PMI and consumer confidence, it appears as though the economy
could be headed for a double dip, especially as federal and state
spending slows rapidly over the next six months."
Economists
warned not to expect any immediate relief to the gloom from the housing
market. Banks continue to demand high deposits from potential buyers
and are pressing on with foreclosures against those who have fallen
behind on mortgages, adding to the glut of unsold homes on the market.
Prices
are back to their 2002 levels, according to the Case-Shiller National
House Price Index out yesterday. "The national index fell 4.2 per cent
over the first quarter alone, and is down 5.1 per cent compared to its
year-ago level," David Blitzer, the chairman of the Index Committee at
S&P Indices, said. "Home prices continue on their downward spiral
with no relief in sight."
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/business/news/us-house-price-fall-beats-great-depression-slide-2291491.html
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/business/news/us-house-price-fall-beats-great-depression-slide-2291491.html