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July 24, 2009 U.S. Home Vacancies Hit 18.7 Million; Whats the Real Story? |
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Bloomberg is reporting U.S. Home Vacancies Hit 18.7 Million on Bank Seizures.
Graphs From Calculated Risk As is typical, Calculated Risk has posted some great charts showing the trends.
Dip In Vacancy Rate Reflects Rise In Rental Rate It appears as if there is improvement in the homeowner vacancy rate, but the main reason for the dip in homeowner vacancies is consumers have given up on trying to sell their homes and instead are attempting to to rent them. Furthermore, the record 10.6% rental vacancy rate is pressuring rental prices as Calculated Risk noted above. Of course there are many finished condo building that were for sale that are instead for rent as apartment buildings. Many of those anticipated condo sales will never be sold. Oversupply of condos is especially rampant in places like Florida, Las Vegas, and San Diego. That adds to various localized pressures. I spoke with Calculated Risk this morning and asked "How many of those vacancies" are even livable. Neither of us could find an answer. Yet the question is an important one as 50 Cities Must "Shrink to Survive".
Banks Walk Away On Foreclosures For further proof many homes are worth nothing (or a liability) please consider Banks Walk Away On Foreclosures.
Astonishing Home Prices In Detroit Also note that Median Home Prices In Detroit Fall To $6,000 as Detroit heads towards bankruptcy. Totaling Unlivable, Worthless Home How many homes for sale in Detroit are unlivable with liabilities that exceed the asking price or are simply unlivable at all? What about Flint, LA, Memphis, Toledo, and even places like Danville, Illinois? There is simply no way to know what that total is. Looking ahead, how many more foreclosures will we see as the unemployment rate heads towards 11% in 2010? These are the kind of factors that are not readily apparent when one looks at the headlines such as "Home Vacancies Hit 18.7 Million on Bank Seizures" and then sees a dip in vacancies. The real story is things are much worse than they look in many ways, even if one could figure out how to subtract vacant "unlivable worthless" homes from the totals.
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Mike Shedlock / Mish Michael "Mish" Shedlock is a registered investment advisor representative for SitkaPacific Capital Management. Visit http://www.sitkapacific.com/ to learn more about wealth management for investors seeking strong performance with low volatility. Copyright © 2005-2009 Mike Shedlock Image rendition and html coding Copyright © 2000-2009 SafeHaven.com ADVERTISEMENTS
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