Snoqualmie Pass Real Estate, Mortgage, and Economy – 11/16/09
Here is the Snoqualmie Pass Real Estate review for last week: Thursday the Wall Street Journal reported Q3 home sales at an annual rate of 5.3 million units. That was an 11.4% gain over Q2’s 4.76 million units. Experts put much of the rising sales to the tax credit of up to $8,000 for first-time homebuyers. A week ago Friday, the President signed a bill extending that tax credit well into next year and expanding it to first-time buyers with higher incomes as well as to existing homeowners, with a $6,500 limit. National Association of Realtors chief economist Lawrence Yun feels “rising sales from the expanded tax credit should stabilize home prices by next spring.” That same tax credit bill also created a new tax break for businesses. The bill lets large firms claim cash refunds on taxes they paid going back five years, to offset current losses. The carry-back period had previously been just two years. Experts estimate this could improve the cash positions of big home builders by hundreds of millions of dollars to further help the recovery. Luxury home builder Toll Brothers is doing just fine already. Tuesday they announced their fiscal Q4 had a 42% jump in contracts over last year. And the value of those contracts was 62% higher than a year ago. The NAR’s report on home prices said most U.S. cities saw gains in the median price of single-family homes for Q3–the second quarter in a row of price gains. Prices were still down from Q3 a year ago, but the pace of the decline has been slowing. Many experts feel the shrinking supply of unsold homes suggests the housing market is edging closer to price stabilization. Even foreclosure fillings fell in October for the third straight month.
HOLDING AT 10,000… We’ve now had two weeks in a row in which investors were confident enough in the recovering economy to keep the Dow Jones Industrial average north of that magic 10,000 number. The S&P 500, a broader indicator of business health, was also up nicely for the week, as well as the tech-heavy Nasdaq, which posted the biggest jump of all. The week got off to a great start on the news that finance ministers and central bankers from 20 major world economies–the “G-20″–will keep their financial support coming until the global recovery is certain. Investors also liked the news that Hewlett-Packard made a deal to buy 3Com to expand its networking business and increase its position in China. Wal-Mart reported a better-than-expected 3.2% boost in Q3 profits and an improved outlook for the year, although it gave a cautious forecast for Q4. The Trade Balance showed exports UP five months in a row since bottoming in April. This is a 24.1% annual growth rate, with imports up at a 32.6% rate. The discrepancy makes for a deficit, but it’s billions smaller than last year. The reality is, the spike in imports and continued export gains signal to many that the economy is getting better. Meanwhile, initial jobless claims fell again last week to 502,000 and the four-week moving average was the lowest in almost a year. For the week, the Dow finished UP 2.5%, to 10270.47; the S&P 500 was also UP 2.3%, to 1093.48; while the Nasdaq went UP 2.6%, to 2167.88.




