本帖最后由 BSW 于 2009-7-31 01:21 编辑
IMHO, it is premature to declare that housing market has bottomed just based on the activities in the past few months.
Using So. Cal. as an example, there are a number of human factors underlying the recent "recovery" in real estate market. First, the inventory has decreased drastically over the past year or so (~40%). Second, there is the typical spring rally in the housing market. Third, there are incentives offered by both the state government and the federal government.
Aside from these human factors, you also have to consider the median price has dived about 50% (yes, 50%!) since the peak around late 2005 in quite some areas (admittedly, the lower end has suffered more percentage-wise while the upscale properties fared much better). By natural law, when something dropped so hard in such a relatively short timeframe, a rebounce should not be surprising.
Nonetheless, it is POSSIBLE the norminal price of housing could have reached bottom. That is if employment does not deteriorate too much further and/or huge inflation is indeed on the horizon.
One more thing, even if housing price has reached bottom, it by no means signals that a booming market will be back soon. If history is any guide, the bottoming process of real estate in So. Cal. lasted about 5-6 years during its last boom-and-bust cycle in the early 1990s. That was the period the market stayed at the trough with a little bit fluctuation, not including the early sliding phase and the later climbing phase. |