4 Signs Your Home Is About to Lose Value (Consumer Action)

UGoldMine.CoM:

Despite signs that the real estate market is bottoming out, millions of homeowners are likely to find themselves in worse shape within the next two years.
Nearly half of the nation’s 52 million mortgage borrowers will have negative equity by the end of the first quarter of 2011, up from the 14 million at the end of this year’s first quarter, according to estimates in an Aug. 5 report by Deutsche Bank (DB). With so many borrowers underwater – or owing more on their home than it’s worth – the risk is high that they’ll default and their homes will go into foreclosure, says Mark Zandi, the chief economist at Moody’s Economy.com. (Moody’s Economy.com estimates that 17.5 million mortgage borrowers will be underwater by early 2010.)Negative equity is the product of several factors. The most significant weight is the broad and persistent decline in home values. A Zillow.com index of home values fell 12.1% year-over-year during the second quarter, resulting in a total drop of 22.3% since the market peaked in mid-2006, according to an Aug. 11 report by the online real estate marketplace. Many buyers who bought their home around the peak with a 20% down payment have lost that dollar amount.“The continued decline of U.S. home prices will contribute to rapidly rising rates of negative equity,” Karen Weaver, a Deutsche Bank research analyst, wrote in the report. “The most obvious implication is for mortgage defaults.”Current homeowners, or those shopping for a home and who are concerned that they’ll end up underwater, should consider how long they expect to live in their house. Being underwater doesn’t affect homeowners unless they plan to sell, Zandi says.Individuals who are staying put for at least the next five to seven years will likely recoup the lost value of their home, says Amy Bohutinsky, a Zillow.com spokeswoman. In addition, homeowners should refrain from borrowing against their mortgage, she says.Those who find themselves underwater can turn to the federal Making Home Affordable plan, which can help you refinance or do a loan modification. You’ll have to meet the eligibility requirements listed here.Whether you’re at risk for falling behind may have more to do with the economy and your neighborhood than your job, your credit or your income. Here are four warning signs that you’re heading underwater.

Foreclosures in your neighborhood

The quickest way to end up underwater is to live in a neighborhood that’s plagued by foreclosures.When one home on your block goes into foreclosure, your home’s value drops by 1%, Zandi says. But that isn’t a one-to-one relationship. If two homes on a block go into foreclosure, your home’s value will drop by more than 2%.
As homes go into foreclosure, they create a domino effect, lowering home values throughout a neighborhood in a cascade beyond homeowners’ control. (For more on factors that reduce a home’s value, read our story.)

Homes lingering on the market

When “For Sale” signs linger in a neighborhood for three or more months, that may mean buyers and sellers can’t agree on a price. In that environment, homes are unlikely to sell unless the seller lowers their asking price.“The time on the market is always a good barometer of demand for homes and for the price homes are transacting at,” Zandi says. “The longer it appears that neighbors are taking to sell their home the more likely it is they’re not getting the price they want and that prices are falling.”Compare the time it took for homes to sell in your neighborhood three years ago vs. today; if it’s taking weeks or months longer to sell, the prices homes can fetch are dropping, Zandi says.

Increasing unemployment

In most cases, the cities where homes have lost the most value during the past year also possess the highest unemployment rates.Homes in Merced, Calif., have lost 40.2% of their value year-over-year, the biggest loss of home values in the nation, according to Zillow.com. The city’s unemployment rate is the fifth-worst among 372 metropolitan areas at 17.6%, according to June data from the Labor Department. El Centro, Calif., where home values plunged 37.6% year-over-year (the second-biggest drop in the country), has the worst unemployment rate at 27.5%.

Related posts:

  1. For Homeowners Underwater, Help Is Near (Consumer Action) For all the government’s work, the climate for buying...
  2. Mortgage Insurers to the Rescue? (Consumer Action) Homeowners in trouble may find help from an unlikely...
  3. Buying a Home? Don’t Miss Out on State Aid (Consumer Action) Location is still everything. ...
  4. Government Mortgage Program Gets Report Card (Consumer Action) The government’s refinancing and loan modification program is on...
  5. 3 Things the Latest Housing Data Don’t Say (Consumer Action) It was the good news that everyone had been...

Leave a Reply

Anti-Spam Protection by WP-SpamFree