Tag Archive for 'bubble'

GBR Fall 2008 now online!

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What Happened to the U.S. Housing Market?

What Happened to the U.S. Housing Market?

As the U.S. financial system struggles to regain stability, Peggy Crawford, PhD, and Terri Young, PhD, examine the role that subprime mortgages and the fall of Fannie and Freddie played in the crisis.
Peggy Crawford, PhD, and Terri Young, PhD

U.S. Could Adopt International Financial Reporting Standards in 2014

U.S. Could Adopt International Financial Reporting Standards in 2014

Two authors demonstrate varying ways in which IFRS adoption could impact business.
John Briginshaw, PhD, and Roger Hussey, PhD

Best Practices for Headcount Reporting

Best Practices for Headcount Reporting

Future workforce planning efforts must systematically account for alternative worker types.
Brad Jorgensen, DProf, and Donald M. Atwater, PhD

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Dream to Nightmare: Who Should Pay for the Housing Disaster?

This is a guest post by Peggy Crawford, PhD, Professor of Finance, and Terry Young, PhD, Professor of Economics

The housing saga continues. The hope of “owning a piece of the American dream” is becoming a nightmare for some home buyers. While optimists argue that the “worst” is over as they cling to any sign of positive news, such as the slight upturn in sales of existing homes in February, others call for the government to come to our rescue and save homeowners by declaring a moratorium on foreclosures or “encouraging” financial institutions to renegotiate loan terms. Meanwhile, the Federal Reserve continues to cut interest rates (sometimes dramatically) hoping to ease the pain for some as interest rates reset on their mortgages and to spur activity in the sagging economy.

Have housing prices stopped plummeting? The experts disagree, but Business Week states that home prices could decline by another 25 percent over the next 2 or 3 years, returning the values to their 2000 levels in inflation-adjusted terms.

What can we expect? Like any market, the housing market is based on economic fundamentals of demand and supply. In general, housing prices are inversely related to interest rates. Now, both interest rates and housing prices are falling at the same time.

So, why aren’t sales increasing? Things have changed.

First, lenders are scrutinizing borrowers more carefully. No/low down payments are disappearing and no documented income is a thing of the past—at least for the time being. And second, potential buyers hear the news and are waiting for prices to fall further. On the other hand, some potential sellers are still in denial that the value of their property is decreasing not increasing.

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