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U.S. home prices to decline 11%, Deutsche Bank says

By: Dan Levy
Bloomberg News
September 14, 2009

HOME PRICES, DEUTSCHE BANK, REAL ESTATE, ECONOMY — Home prices in the U.S. will fall a further 10.5 percent and reach bottom at the end of next year’s second quarter, according to

Deutsche

Bank AG.

The total decline will be 38 percent measured from the estimated market peak in the fourth quarter of 2005, New York- based analysts led by Karen Weaver said in a report today. The forecast covers 100 metropolitan areas.

“Serious delinquencies are still rising rapidly in mortgages, unemployment reached a new cycle high, inventory in most parts of the country is elevated, and in some areas affordability is backtracking,” the analysts wrote.

Deutsche Bank said the current-to-trough decline in June would be 14 percent and the total drop would be 42 percent. Home-price gains and a slowing of the unemployment rate account for an improved outlook, the analysts wrote.

Prices in 20 U.S. cities fell at a slower pace than forecast in June, dropping 15.4 percent from a year earlier, according to S&P/Case-Shiller home-price index. The measure rose from the prior month by the most in four years. Employers cut 216,000 workers from payrolls last month, fewer than forecast, the Labor Department said Sept. 4.

Foreclosure moratoriums may have been enough to “turn momentum and confidence,” although such government policies “merely delay the inevitable,” the analysts wrote.

Home prices in the Los Angeles metropolitan area, the largest as measured by its share of non-prime mortgages, will fall a further 5 percent, Deutsche Bank said. Prices will drop an additional 15 percent in Riverside, California; 39 percent in the New York area; 12 percent in Washington; and 9.5 percent in Orange County, California, according to Deutsche Bank.

Prices will decline a further 1.6 percent in the San Diego area; 11 percent in Phoenix; 14 percent in Oakland, California; 4.8 percent in Chicago; and 16 percent in Las Vegas, the analysts said.



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Gunnar R.

Sep 15, 2009

In fact not only Deutsche Bank is experiencing this economical downturn. Lots of other establishment firm and companies are failing to cope with this disaster. The Federal Reserve is being hailed as the prime mover in the bank bailout to avoid more bank failures, even though banks are still failing. Some things nobody knows – the Federal Reserve isn't part of the government; it's actually a private group. There is little or no Congressional oversight – and this is who prints our money. Health care reform and the gay marriage debate are great distractions, but the unchecked powers of the Fed are more or less unknown to the people. Perhaps an audit and reigning in of the Federal Reserve would be a good idea, before Wall Street gets another pay day.

 


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