Real Estate

It's all about living somewhere, it's part of life so it's always good to know what's happening in real estate.

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Location: Boston, Massachusetts, United States

I'm a mother of two grown sons, my husband and I are empty-nesters at this point. Both of my sons have graduated from College. One is a graphic designer and the other is a senior credit analyst. My oldest is married and has a son (grandmother-yippee!) and owns his own home. My other son has a condo and getting married! There is something to say about all that. I am very proud of them and feel I accomplished a great task in my life. I've always work hard at everything I do and feel that is the only way I get things done to get what I want. I guess that's the way it was meant to be for me anyway. I truly believe things happen for a reason and if you want something you have to take chances to get it.

Wednesday, September 03, 2008

MARKET RECAP

Everything isn’t turning up roses quite yet, but last week’s slate of economic news suggests that at least blooms are forming. Existing-home sales hit a five-month high, according to new data from the National Association of Realtors, jumping 3.1% in July to 5 million units from 4.85 million in June.

Meanwhile, on the new-home front, sales rose 2.4% in July to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 515,000 units after falling to a revised 17-year low in June, the Commerce Department reported. More encouraging, the inventory of unsold homes declined for the second month in a row, to a 10.1 months’ supply at the current sales pace. It appears that new home sales have begun to stabilize, as sharply reduced prices have lured buyers back into the market.

Prices on both existing and new homes should continue to stabilize along with the economy. On the latter, gross domestic product grew at a seasonally adjusted 3.3% annual rate during the second quarter, exceeding most economists’ estimates by over a percentage point. The new GDP numbers reflect new data showing that exports were even stronger than first estimated and that business inventories weren’t depleted as much as earlier thought.

Further proof of a recovering economy could be found in durable goods orders – products that have a life expectancy of at least three years, including cars, computers and aircraft. They increased 1.3% in July, matching June’s revised number. Economists had predicted orders would drop 0.5%. (Overall, it was a bad week for the professional prognosticators.)

Even long-suffering shareholders in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac had something to cheer about. It seems that the prior week’s talk of nationalization may have been premature (but that doesn’t mean it won’t happen yet). An emerging sentiment among investors is that both institutions might still have a life as independents, which lifted both Fannie’s and Freddie’s stock 50% higher. (Keep in mind, though, it doesn’t take much price movement to produce big percentage swings in a low-priced stock.)