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Housing crisis puts off first-time
buyers
By Scott Malone
BOSTON
- For decades, buying a home was a key step on the path to financial
security for the American middle class.
Home owners could count on a fixed
mortgage payment rather than rising rent, take advantage of tax
breaks, and build equity as their houses increased in value over
time.
But with home prices falling and
families losing their homes to foreclosure, some people who under
other circumstances would be looking to buy their first home now see
greater security in renting.
One such person is Lisa Chesnut,
who lives in Tucson, Arizona, and works as an information systems
coordinator. With a good job and two young sons, 29-year-old Chesnut
and her husband, Bryan, look like classic first-time buyers.
They had considered it, until the
market started to slide a year ago.
"At first we thought, prices are
falling, that's good," she said in a phone interview.
"Then we started reading about the
foreclosures and the ARM rates and people losing their homes," she
said. "We thought, what if something happened where we could lose
our house?"
Her big fear is falling behind on a
mortgage. Having read about people who face higher payments on their
adjustable-rate mortgages (ARM), she realizes that being approved
for a loan does not guarantee it will be affordable.
STAYING PUT
One sign that more people are
choosing to remain in rental apartments while they wait out the
slump comes from Equity Residential, one of the largest U.S.
apartment owners. Fewer people have been moving out of its
apartments -- last year 63.3 percent of its units changed hands,
down from 64.9 percent in 2006.
"Turnover is slowing and the rate
of moving out for home purchase we also saw slow throughout 2007,"
said Fred Tuomi, president of property management at the
Chicago-based company, who oversees about 150,000 apartments
nationwide.
And population projections by the
National Association of Realtors suggest hundreds of thousands of
young Americans are sitting out the housing market entirely --
neither buying nor renting.
"There's probably 700,000, maybe
800,000 people out there that are not getting into the market either
as a renter or as a homebuyer," said Walter Molony, spokesman for
the NAR. "Where are these folks? They're out there, they've got
jobs. Some of them are moving back with their parents, never left
the house, they're doubling up with roommates."
There's no scarcity of data to
worry potential homebuyers. Recent reports show that the average
price of an existing single-family home in U.S. metropolitan areas
fell 6 percent in the fourth quarter, while foreclosure rates in the
top 100 metropolitan areas soared 78 percent last year.
"They're the most nervous people
I've ever met in my life," said Bob Moulton, president of Americana
Mortgage Group, referring to the potential first-time buyers he
speaks with.
"They've seen what can go wrong in
the mortgage market," said Moulton, whose company brokers $300
million of mortgages a year, mainly in suburban New York.
"Everybody's advising them, from the mother, to the father, to the
uncle, their co-workers, telling them, 'Don't buy. Prices are coming
down."'
OWNERSHIP DOWN
Indeed, home ownership rates have
fallen to 67.8 percent of households at the end of last year from
69.2 percent in 2004. That is below a 69.8 percent rate in Britain,
but still much higher than European countries such as France and
Germany.
For young people who are unsure
about whether to buy instead of renting, experts said the key thing
to consider is how long one plans to live in a house.
During the boom years, from the
late 90s through the first half of this decade, rapidly rising house
prices meant that in many parts of the country a buyer could turn an
easy profit after owning a house for just a year or two.
Now young buyers should plan to
stay in their homes longer than that, said Jim Gaines, a research
economist at the Real Estate Center of Texas A&M University, in
College Station, Texas. Even his own son, who recently married, has
come to him with fears about buying real estate.
"I told my son this, 'Look, if you
buy a home today, you better be prepared to stay in it for a minimum
of five years. Don't worry if it goes up or goes down (in value) a
little bit in the next six months,"' Gaines said.
That knowledge is another factor
keeping some young Americans in their rental apartments.
"A lot of people I know are in that
position, where their home isn't going to sell for what they paid
for it right now," said Josh Stenger, a 37-year-old professor of
film studies who lives in a rental apartment in Pawtucket, Rhode
Island.
Stenger
said he has toyed with buying a house or condominium, but has held
off until he was sure he would be staying put for several years.
"I don't foresee buying anything
without planning to stay in it at least five years," Stenger said.
"If the economy was different and it looked like prices were going
to start going up again, I might feel more pressure."--
Reuters
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