Showing posts with label growing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label growing. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 22, 2014

More Owners Delay Remodeling Projects, Again

Remodeling and home improvement spending posted a strong rebound last year, but the rebound was short-lived, a new report says. Remodeling projects and expenditures are back on the decline this year as housing market conditions and fading tax incentives cause more home owners to delay projects once again. 
Getting Back Remodeling Bucks
The primary driver of home remodeling expenditures is the pace of single-family existing home sales, writes Robert Dietz, an economist with the National Association of Home Builders, in an article at U.S. News & World Report. Between the summer of 2013 and March of this year, existing-home sales fell, Dietz says, despite a recent rebound. As such, Dietz says the remodeling market has seen declines in the annual pace of improvement spending since December 2013. 
“Existing home owners are most likely to improve a home prior to placing the home on the market, and new home owners find the best time to make substantial changes to a home is immediately after purchase,” Dietz notes. 
The pace of remodeling in August was down more than 10 percent year-over-year, according to U.S. Census Bureau data. 
Dietz points not only to the stall in home sales but also to the expiration at the end of 2013 of a set of federal energy-efficiency tax credits for the slowdown in remodeling expenditures. The tax credits helped home owners to offset the cost of replacing older windows, hot water tanks, and appliances with new energy-efficient models. 
“Despite these economic and policy headwinds, the prospects for the remodeling sector appear more positive for 2015,” Dietz notes. An index of professional remodeler sentiment shows a gain in confidence, particularly as the existing single-family sales market improves. The National Association of REALTORS® is forecasting a 7.7 percent growth in existing sales in 2015.
“Underlying these market improvements is the fact that our nation’s housing stock continues to age, and aging homes require upgrading and modification,” Dietz notes. The median age of owner-occupied homes was 35 years old, according to the 2011 American Housing Survey (in the 1985 AHS survey, the median age was 23). 
Source: “In Need of Housing Improvement,” U.S. News & World Report (Oct. 20, 2014)


Friday, September 19, 2014

The 12 Best Cities to Live Are ...

Newton, Mass., has been crowned as this year’s best U.S. city to live in, according to rankings from 24/7 Wall St. The publication narrowed its list to 550 cities (all of which have more than 65,000 residents) and ranked the cities based on seven major categories: crime, economy, education, housing, environment, leisure, and infrastructure.
The labor market was one of the key measures used to identify the best cities, with top cities having to show positive employment growth between 2011 and 2013.
More Best Cities:
24/7 Wall St. noted that “surprisingly, none of America’s largest cities are on this list,” citing that the largest cities tend to have higher crime rates that automatically excluded them from consideration, as well higher poverty rates.
Below are the 12 cities that topped 24/7 Wall St.’s list. Visit 24/7 Wall St. to view the full methodology used in the rankings for each of the top cities. 
  1. Newton, Mass.
  2. Bellevue, Wash.
  3. Mountain View, Calif.
  4. Pleasanton, Calif.
  5. Evanston, Ill.
  6. Irvine, Calif.
  7. Troy, Mich.
  8. Cary, N.C.
  9. Flower Mound, Texas
  10. Johns Creeks, Ga.
  11.  Boca Raton, Fla.
  12. Carmel, Ind.
Source: “America’s 50 Best Cities to Live,” 24/7 Wall St. (Sept. 17, 2014)


Monday, August 5, 2013

How to Identify a Healthy Housing Market

Houston-based real estate consulting firm Metrostudy uses "drive-bys" to help it gauge the health of the residential market in different U.S. metro areas.  Employees drive through newly built—or still under construction—housing developments from Texas to Florida and begin observing. 
If there are toys on a house's front lawn, for example, that is a good sign that a family has moved in.  Another positive sign is if a garden hose is attached to the side of the house.  Not only is the home occupied, it also has an owner who cares about his or her property. 
Among the bad signs are the absence of curtains in the windows, a high number of empty lots, and newly completed but clearly vacant houses.  Metrostudy researchers say these are indicators that a developer may have badly overestimated demand and could soon be saddled with inventory. 
Brad Hunter, chief economist of Metrostudy, is projecting double-digit increases in new-home prices for the remainder of 2013.  He sees the speculative excess mostly gone from the market.  In 2014, though, Hunter forecasts that new-home prices will increase only 6 percent as interest rates continue their upward climb.  He concludes, "Mortgage rates could pose a challenge to affordability."
Source: "To Figure Out Where Real Estate Is Headed, Start Driving," Business Week (Aug. 5, 2013)
© Copyright 2013 Information Inc.
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Tuesday, May 28, 2013

8 Fast-Growing Cities


Americans are continuing to flock to Texas. The state boasts the most cities that added the highest percentage of residents in the past year. 
However, New York continues to hold the crown as the largest city in the U.S., and added 67,000 new residents between July 2011 and July 2012—which is the largest gain of any city in the nation. 
The following cities saw the biggest increases in new residents between July 2011 and July 2012, according to the U.S. Census Bureau: 
  1. New York
    • New residents: 67,000
    • Population: 8.3 million
  2. Houston
    • New residents: 34,625
    • Population: 2.2 million
  3. Los Angeles
    • New residents: 34,500
    • Population: 3.9 million
  4. San Antonio, Texas
    • New residents: 25,400
    • Population: 1.4 million
  5. Austin, Texas
    • New residents: 25,400
    • Population: 840,000
  6. Phoenix
    • New residents: 24,500
    • Population: 1.5 million
  7. Dallas
    • New residents: 23,300
    • Population: 1.2 million
  8. Charlotte, N.C.
    • New residents: 19,000
    • Population: 775,000
Source: “10 Big, Booming Cities,” CNNMoney (May 2013)
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