emptydumpty.com emptydumpty.com emptydumpty.com
Search:    Site Home :> About Us :> Privacy Policy :> ToS :> Add Your Link :> Add Article   
Get 3 way links
 

Family & Home

Banking & Finance

Outdoor & Sports

Policies & Law

Healthcare & Medicine

Games & Play

Science & Research

Children

Recreation & Entertainment

Education & Reference

Business & Commerce

Automobile & Automotive

Eating & Drinking

Property & Estate

Self Enhancement

Society & Issues

Shopping Online

Fashion & Lifestyle

Creative Arts

News & Media

Computers & Networking

Tour & Travel

Jobs & Employment

Health & Therapy

 

Site Home –› Property & Estate –› Real Estate Websites
 

San Diego Real Estate Bubble Not Yet Ready to Burst

 
Author: J Harris

Michael Youngblood is a veteran analyst and the managing director of asset-backed securities research for Friedman Billings Ramsey & Co. in Arlington, Virginia. According to an interview he gave to BusinessWeek for its May 15th issue, the idea of a national bubble for residential real estate is fictitious. Since there is no national residential real estate market, there can be no national housing price bubble.

There are, however, residential real estate bubbles in 75 housing markets that he studies. Most exist either on the East or West Coast. San Diego residential real estate market is one of them. In a study he conducted in 2002, San Diego was one bubble city of several for which Youngblood was concerned, along with several other cities within the state of California and elsewhere. However, recent research has proven that the residential real estate markets within these California cities are more optimistic than previously projected and currently debated.

Youngblood assesses prices for the residential real estate markets in 379 metropolitan statistical areas, including San Diego. Most residential real estate forecasters use reactive indicators to predict future market changes, such as inventory-to-sales ratios and number of months required to sell residential real estate. Youngblood believes such indicators do not predict market changes; they only react to market changes. He created his own economic model, based on two predictive indicators that actually drive the residential real estate market. They are growth in employment and growth in personal income, both of which affect a buyers ability, desire and willingness to purchase a home and at what price. His findings are much more optimistic than other forecasters and show a much stronger residential real estate market than most other analysts suspect.

Youngblood predicts the greatest declines for the residential real estate market in states other than California. He sees both Bakersfield and Stockton showing the greatest gains in the state at 43 and 39 percent, respectively. The state of Florida also should expect substantial gains.

Though many forecasters believe that residential real estate prices are over-inflated in both California and Florida, these markets are driven by speculation that ignores underlying fundamental factors. Based on historical data, bubbles exist when median existing home prices are 6.8 times greater than the per capita personal income of a particular housing market.

According to Youngblood, bubbles may persist over long periods of time, as long as local economies are good. With a downturn in the local economy, there is typically a one-year lag before the downturn affects the residential real estate market. Even then, the market declines over a long period of time.

Given the gains Youngblood predicts in California, there should be no significant fall during 2006 for San Diego real estate prices. People should not necessarily fear buying or investing in this bubble market, though cautious and informed spending is always the smart path.

Author Bio:
J Harris is an expert on this subject. J has written several articles in the past on this topic.
You can search for this article using: real estate web sites, real estate agent web sites, real estate investor websites
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Investment Real Estate -- A New Twist: Be the Bank, Not the Landlord, and Get Rich Without the Work!
 
A Real Estate Marketing Script Is Worth Its Weight in Gold
 
Buying A New Home - Things To Consider Before Buying A House
 
So You Want to Buy a Home?
 
Should You Time the Real Estate Market?
 
Creative Real Estate Investment
 
Buy or Sell First?
 
Renting vs. Ownership: a Changing Reality
 
How Much Can You Get For Your Home?
 
Mini Houses
 
 
 
   Site Home :> Privacy Policy :> ToS
© 2006 www.emptydumpty.com - All Rights Reserved