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Home prices, consumer confidence plunge in US
By Joe Kay
26 March 2008
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In continued signs of economic recession in the US, figures
released on Tuesday show home prices and consumer confidence falling
sharply.
The Conference Board, a business-backed research group in New
York, reported that its index of consumer confidence fell to a
five-year low in March, to 64.5 from a revised 76.4 in February.
The reading was far below Wall Street expectations of 73.0.
The index is a relative measure, with confidence in 1985 set
at 100. The overall index is at its lowest level since the early
1990s, except for a brief period in 2003.
The Conference Board noted that there was a particularly sharp
drop in the index measuring expected future confidence, to 47.9
from 58.0. The Expectations Index, in fact, is now at a
35-year low (Dec. 1973, 45.2), levels not seen since the Oil Embargo
and Watergate, a press release noted.
The collapse of consumer confidence is a reflection of the
increasing economic strain felt by millions of Americans, who
have been hit by high commodity prices, declining wages, and increasing
unemployment. In February, employment fell by 63,000 jobs, the
second consecutive monthly decline and the worst figure since
2003.
A major factor in the decline in consumer confidence is the
continued atrophy of the housing market. High home prices had
allowed many workers to sustain spending under conditions of economic
stagnation. As housing prices drop, many homeowners are finding
that they now have more debt than their homes are worth, leading
to a surge of foreclosures.
US home prices recorded a huge drop in January, according to
the Standard & Poors/Case-Schiller Index. A 20-city
composite index saw an annual decline of 10.7 percent, the sharpest
fall since the index was begun in 1983.
Price declines were most severe in cities where the housing
bubble has been most pronounced, including Las Vegas, Nevada (-19.3
percent); Miami, Florida (-19.3 percent); Phoenix, Arizona (-18.2
percent); San Diego, California (-16.7 percent); and Los Angeles,
California (-16.5 percent).
In Detroit, Michigan, home prices fell by over 15 percent,
reflecting the ongoing economic decline of the center of the American
auto industry. The average price for a house in the city of Detroit
(excluding suburbs) fell 54 percent from a year ago, according
to the Detroit Board of Realtors.
The sharpest drops have occurred in cities where the foreclosure
rate is the highest. According to an article in the Wall Street
Journal on Tuesday, foreclosure-related sales have accounted
for more than 40 percent of all sales in many cities, including
Las Vegas and San Diego.
Among the cities included in the index, only Charlotte, North
Carolina, saw an increase in home prices, by 1.8 percent.
David Blitzer, chairman of the Index Committee at Standard
& Poors, commented, Unfortunately, it does not
look like early 2008 is marking any turnaround in the housing
market, after the declining year recorded throughout 2007... The
monthly data show that every one of the MSAs [Metropolitan Statistical
Areas] has now declined every month since September 2007, marking
five consecutive months. On top of that, he noted, the
declines have increased through time, in general, as 13 of the
20 MSAs reported their single largest monthly decline in January.
This means that the housing market still has a long way to
go before prices start to stabilize. Figures released on Monday
show that the median price of existing homes being sold in February
fell by 8.2 percent.
The US housing market has been a significant factor in the
financial crisis on Wall Street, where several large banks have
speculated heavily in mortgage-related securities.
On Monday, New York Citys independent budget office estimated
that 20,000 people will lose their jobs on Wall Street over the
next two years. This figure, which does not take into account
the recent crisis at Bear Stearns, likely significantly underestimates
the number of job losses. According to Bloomberg News, some 34,000
jobs in the financial sector have been lost in the last nine months
alone, including 6,200 jobs at Citigroup, 4,990 at Lehman Brothers,
and 2,940 at Morgan Stanley. Bear Stearns may shed as many as
8,000 jobs as part of its restructuring after being purchased
by JPMorgan Chase.
One week ago, in order to stave off a financial meltdown, the
Federal Reserve supported the move by JP Morgan Chase to purchase
Bear Stearns. At the same time, the Fed announced an unprecedented
move to shore up other investment banks by opening its lending
discount window. Previously, only commercial banks were allowed
to borrow at special discount rates offered by the Fed.
Investment banks have been quick to seize on the Feds
offer, indicating that they are in deep financial trouble and
eager for cash. Close to $30 billion has been borrowed so far.
In another sign of a continued crisis among investment banks,
JPMorgan Chase and UBS AG announced on Tuesday that they are cutting
their earnings forecast for Merrill Lynch. Next to Bear Stearns,
Merrill Lynch is considered to be the most exposed of the major
investment banks to the housing market collapse. JPMorgan Chase
analysts predicted that Merrill would have to write down an additional
$2.1 billion of subprime debt.
See Also:
Recessionary trends deepen, sparking
gyrations on stock, commodities markets
[22 March 2008]
Shades of 1929: Bear Stearns collapse
signals deepest crisis since Great Depression
[18 March 2008]
Detroit: highest home foreclosure
rate in US
[20 February 2008]
US home foreclosures rise
by 75 percent in 2007
[30 January 2008]
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