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- <text id=91TT0558>
- <title>
- Mar. 18, 1991: The Buyers Are Back
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Mar. 18, 1991 A Moment To Savor
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 64
- The Buyers Are Back
- </hdr><body>
- <p>As consumers regain optimism and the market for homes revives,
- the spring house-hunting season should bring quite a change
- from the winter doldrums
- </p>
- <p>By Janice Castro--Reported by Robert Ajemian/Boston, Gisela
- Bolte/Washington and Jane Van Tassel/New York
- </p>
- <p>-- John and Lil Cronin listed their white Dutch colonial in
- Milton, Mass., at 1 p.m. one day last week. At 3, Lisa Looney
- drove up to take a look. She liked the place. By 6 the Cronins,
- who were asking $210,000, had accepted a $200,000 offer from
- Looney and her husband. Says broker Mary Sullivan: "We were
- astonished at how fast it moved. But that's the way it's been
- here. Our customer calls have doubled in the first six weeks
- of 1991 compared with a year ago."
- </p>
- <p>-- In Montville, N.J., homebuilder Hovnanian Enterprises had
- barely set up a sales trailer on the site of a planned housing
- project last month when buyers started lining up. Says
- spokesman J. Larry Sorsby: "We had no sample homes or models,
- and we sold the whole thing--78 homes--the first weekend."
- </p>
- <p>-- Stephen and Maureen Reynolds decided to buy their first
- home--a four-bedroom, two-bath, 30-year-old house on a scenic
- lot overlooking a ravine--as soon as they saw that the Desert
- Storm air campaign was a roaring success. Reynolds, who designs
- travel-industry software for a Houston firm, figured that if
- the war was going that well, his job was safe. Says he:
- "Interest rates were good, we had finally saved up the money,
- the war was coming to a quick close, housing prices were
- rising. The future is looking a lot better."
- </p>
- <p> It certainly is. In large swaths of the U.S., from Cape Cod
- to Los Angeles, from San Francisco to Long Island, in New
- Orleans, Chicago, St. Louis and such depressed markets as
- Denver and Houston, signs abound that the long, bleak housing
- slump is easing. As the rebound percolates through one market
- after another, real estate agents, mortgage bankers and
- builders forecast a heartening home-buying surge this spring.
- </p>
- <p> If you're suspicious of real estate industry hope and hype,
- listen to Barbara Allen, housing-industry analyst for Kidder,
- Peabody: "It's more than a little upturn. It's quite powerful,
- and it is across the country. In Chicago orders in the resale
- market for the first two months of the year were up smartly.
- In St. Louis the place is absolutely booming." Realtors who
- were doing the crosswords a month ago now have waiting rooms
- full of eager clients.
- </p>
- <p> What's going on here? The U.S. is still slogging through a
- painful recession, and several major new economic measures fly
- in the face of optimism. Just last week the Bush Administration
- issued one of the most dismal housing reports since the depths
- of the 1982 recession: new-home sales declined 12% in January.
- At the same time, housing starts were down 13%. Sales of
- existing homes were off 7%, according to the National
- Association of Realtors. The Labor Department reported Friday
- that unemployment surged to 6.5% in February, up from 6.2% a
- month earlier, in the biggest one-month increase in four years.
- Most economists expect the jobless rate to approach 7% in the
- next six months before falling off.
- </p>
- <p> That doesn't sound like a recipe for a housing revival. But
- in a world that has seen a Middle East ground war waged and won
- in 100 hours, January--the month chronicled in those dismal
- federal figures--is ancient history. In the past few weeks,
- growing numbers of Americans have concluded that now is the
- time to look for a place to call their own.
- </p>
- <p> The trend isn't growing evenly in all regions, to be sure,
- or in all sectors of the industry. Nationwide, however, a
- survey of 300 builders by the National Association of Home
- Builders found that nearly twice as many potential buyers were
- shopping at new subdivisions in February as in January. The
- Mortgage Bankers Association reported last week that
- mortgage-application volume during February more than doubled
- from what it had been in December. While most of that growth
- came from refinancing activity as homeowners traded down to
- lower interest rates, the remainder represents a significant
- pickup in buying.
- </p>
- <p> Call it the Desert Storm surge. According to TIME/CNN polls
- conducted by Yankelovich Clancy Shulman, the percentage of
- Americans who think the U.S. is pulling out of recession jumped
- from 31% four weeks ago to 54% last week. More dramatically,
- 44% of those polled said last week they expect economic
- conditions to get better in the coming year, while 15% expect
- them to become worse; those proportions have almost exactly
- reversed since January. Real estate agent Christine
- Gainey-Colombo was so discouraged by the industry slump in
- northern New Jersey that just a few months ago she was seriously
- considering giving up and returning to her former career as
- a nurse. Says she: "Last year you couldn't give a house away,
- but now the change is incredible. I put in 84 hours last week."
- </p>
- <p> ReRe Avegno, a real estate agent in Metairie, a New Orleans
- suburb, remembers exactly when her phone started ringing off
- the hook: a few days into the allied air campaign, when it
- became clear that the U.S.-led forces in the gulf had gained
- the upper hand. As long as the possibility existed of a
- protracted and ruinously expensive war, many Americans were
- frozen in an anxious stasis in which they were delaying major
- financial decisions. Says John Tuccillo, chief economist of the
- National Association of Realtors: "With the flush of victory,
- people are going out looking for houses." Some have more to
- celebrate than others. In San Jose home sales have jumped an
- astonishing 42% since heavy rains arrived two weeks ago.
- Already buoyed by the war's end, some Californians are
- apparently beginning to believe their destructive five-year
- drought may finally be nearing an end.
- </p>
- <p> An important reason for the new bounce in housing is the
- fall in mortgage interest rates. Testifying before Congress
- last week, Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan noted that
- "fixed-rate mortgage interest rates are close to their lowest
- levels since the late 1970s." The Federal Home Loan Mortgage
- Corporation reports that on average across the U.S., lenders
- are offering new customers fixed-rate 30-year mortgages at
- 9.49%, down from 10.67% last May.
- </p>
- <p> Combine the lower rates with home prices that have fallen
- over the past several months and housing is suddenly more
- affordable than it has been in years. Making home buying still
- easier, some banks are requiring smaller down payments than
- they were a few months ago, figuring that mortgages on homes
- at current prices are among their safest loans. That confidence
- seems justified: in its most recent report, the Mortgage
- Bankers Association noted a sharp drop in mortgage delinquency
- rates during the fourth quarter of 1990.
- </p>
- <p> Eager shoppers in some regions are creating a buying fever
- that feeds on itself. Says Jon Posner, a real estate agent in
- Westchester County, north of New York City: "There is an
- extraordinary amount of pent-up demand, and buyers have
- generally said, `It may go lower, but I'm not going to wait and
- see.' Some tell me that it's not important to get the absolute
- bottom price. It's like shopping for clothes. You see a suit
- you like, and you think the price may drop further, but on the
- other hand, it may get sold before that happens."
- </p>
- <p> Randolph Marshall, 31, could not at first come to terms with
- the owners of the house he wanted to buy in Levittown, Pa. They
- did not want to accept a bid below $139,000, and he would not
- offer more than $128,000. Then, using a multiple-listing book,
- Marshall picked out 25 houses in the area that appealed to him.
- He was shocked to learn that all had been sold. Said he: "I got
- a little bit of buyer's panic." Marshall went back to the first
- home and last month signed a contract to buy it for $135,000.
- </p>
- <p> Like Marshall, most of the season's eager new shoppers are
- first-time home buyers who are purchasing existing houses. They
- are generally seeking dwellings priced below $200,000. Says
- Posner: "People are looking at houses more as a shelter and
- less as an investment. They feel they are going to buy a house
- and they're going to live in it, and they don't expect to flip
- it over in a couple of years and make a bundle of money."
- </p>
- <p> The most dramatic improvements in housing markets are
- probably in the South. Because the region has so many military
- bases, it was hit harder than other parts of the U.S. by the
- mobilization for the gulf war. Between August and January,
- while new-home sales fell at an annual rate of 10% in the
- Northeast, they fell 32% in the Southern states. Now the region
- will probably enjoy the healthiest rebound as many of the
- troops return Stateside filled with optimism about their
- futures and ready to invest in homes.
- </p>
- <p> With all the talk about a glut of new homes and the
- depression in the construction industry, it's hard to believe
- that some experts predict a new-home shortage starting this
- year. But they do. The collapse of the savings and loan
- industry has slashed available capital at the same time that
- commercial banks have tightened up on lending.
- </p>
- <p> Barbara Allen of Kidder, Peabody estimates U.S. demand for
- new housing at 1.3 million to 1.4 million units a year for the
- next 10 years, including replacement housing. Yet little is
- being invested in land development, and as Allen points out,
- "You can't build a house unless you have a lot that has all the
- roads, permits and governmental O.K.s. It takes a long time."
- </p>
- <p> Desirable new subdivisions are beginning to inspire
- occasional bidding frenzies. Would-be buyers during the past
- several weeks have taken to camping out in front of homes to
- ensure themselves a chance to bid. The Toll Bros. development
- company held a grand opening the first weekend in February for
- a new housing project southwest of Philadelphia--not that
- there was much to open. Only a single roof had been raised. Yet
- 400 people showed up the first day, and the initial 32 homes
- planned sold out within four days. When the company held an
- opening for a project near Washington the following week,
- buyers put down deposits on 14 of the first 20 homes.
- </p>
- <p> A shortage of new housing will continue to boost demand for
- existing homes as more buyers compete for them. That will
- provide welcome relief to many homeowners who found selling
- distressingly difficult while prices were depressed. In Oak
- Park, Ill., Tom and Debbie Wagner put their house on the market
- last November after he accepted a job transfer to Ohio. Says
- she: "We must have had 100 people look at this house, but no
- one was buying." In February, when Tom left for his new job,
- Debbie had to stay behind with their three children. "It was
- getting real depressing," she recalls, "being here with three
- kids, all boys, and without my husband." Now that's over. Two
- weeks ago, they sold.
- </p>
- <p> If the housing surge continues to gather momentum, as most
- industry economists seem to think it will, it can help to power
- the U.S. economy out of recession, in part by setting off a
- chain reaction of other purchases: furniture, linens, home
- electronics and all the other gear a home requires. Happily,
- the phenomenon seems to be affecting all regions. Even in areas
- like New England, which is still firmly in recession's grip,
- some of the better houses are selling as quickly as brokers can
- list them. At the Greater Boston Real Estate Board, officials
- say pending sales are up 55% for the first seven weeks of the
- year. In Wellesley, Mass., last week a broker was just taking
- out his hammer to put up his sign in front of a shingled Cape
- Cod overlooking a lake when a man emerged from the house. "Put
- the sign away," said the buyer. "It's already sold."
- </p>
- <p>During the next 12 months, do you think the economic conditions
- in this country will:
- <table>
- <tblhdr><cell><cell>Get worse?<cell>Get better?
- <row><cell type=a>Jan. 10, 1991<cell type=i>43%<cell type=i>19%
- <row><cell>March 7, 1991<cell>15%<cell>44%
- </table>
- </p>
- <p>TIME Poll by Yankelovich Clancy Shulman.
- </p>
- </body></article>
- </text>
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