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"Why home values may take decades to recover," by Dennis Cauchon (USAToday.com)
Quite a horrifying article about the depth (and breadth) housing's role in the financial crisis, and why the market is in the doldrums in a bad bad way.
QUOTE:
Home values have fallen before — during the Great Depression and in Texas after a 1980s oil boom, for example — but those drops were a response to other economic forces. This time, the housing price collapse is the cause of the nation's broad economic troubles, not just an effect.
UNQUOTE
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More room to fall?
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As painful as the decline has been, history suggests home values still may have a long way to drop and may take decades to return to the heights of 2½ years ago.
"We will never see these prices again in our lifetime, when you adjust for inflation," says Peter Schiff, president of investment firm Euro Pacific Capital of Darien, Conn. "These were lifetime peaks."
The boom in home prices — fueled by heavily leveraged loans built on low or even no down payments — made it easy to forget that housing values had been remarkably stable for a half-century after World War II, rising at roughly the same pace as income and inflation. Prices soared in most of the country — especially in Arizona, California, Florida and Nevada and metro areas of Washington, D.C., and New York — during a brief period of easy lending, especially from 2002 to 2006. That era's over.
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The Impact of the Subprime Mortgage Squeeze Across the U.S. - New York Times > Business > Image >
This is an amazing graphic -- it's a map of the US, populated with what look for all the world like skyscrapers or high rise buildings. The catch: the height of these structures actually indicate the subprime mortgage foreclosures as a percentage of all subprime mortgages in metropolitan areas (Dec.07). Gives "density" a whole new vibe -- and it's not a good one, because these densely "built up" areas are basically financial holes, negatives not positives.
Found via IF! (see http://if.psfk.com/if/#Fantastic%20Chart)
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