The latest survey shows that 71% of economists believe that the U.S. economy has slipped into recession. Commerce Department shows a deep drop in retail sales in February with an associated drop in consumer confidence. The situation has only continued to deteriorate in March, with faltering payrolls and increasing unemployment demonstrating that the economy has continued to contract.
As a backdrop to this news, the real estate situation in California has continued its decline with no improvement in sight. The median prices continued to drop across the state with Southern California leading with a slide of 17.9%. This does not mean that the Silicon Valley area fared much better; in the nine counties of the San Francisco Bay Area, the median price fell 11.6 percent. Home sales volume continues to hit record lows.
So much for “California Dreaming” - The entire situation is a harsh lesson to many home-owners who thought that housing prices only go up, or that the maximum downside could never be more than 10%. The entire region is likely to see housing price drops of nearly 30% before the end of 2008.
Home prices plunge across California
Showing posts with label Bay Area. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bay Area. Show all posts
Friday, March 14, 2008
Quick Takes: The Big “R’, California Dreaming
Tuesday, October 16, 2007
It's time to play Bay Area Mortgage Meltdown
I have regularly been informed that the Bay Area is immune to a mortgage meltdown and the housing prices are still humming along. The statistics and information appear to demonstrate a different story.
"Of the Bay Area's 236 ZIP codes, 25 are foreclosure hot spots - places where more than eight of every 1,000 homes were repossessed by lenders this year."
MORTGAGE MELTDOWN
NEIGHBORHOODS CRUMBLE IN WAVE OF FORECLOSURES
LOCAL TROUBLE ZONES: Epidemic repossessions hit several ZIP codes
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2007/10/14/MNVPSEMVQ.DTL
Posted by
GregB
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10/16/2007
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Labels: Bay Area, credit crunch, housing, macroeconomic, Silicon Valley, subprime, U.S. economy
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