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Subprime Fallout May Sink Sales Of New Homes
Michael Corkery. Wall Street Journal. (Eastern edition). New York, N.Y.: Mar 13, 2007. pg. C.2

Abstract (Summary)

If people selling an entry-level home can't find buyers, it often means they can't move up and buy a pricier home. Ms. [Ivy Zelman], who derives much of her research from surveys with private builders and mortgage originators, also expects rising delinquencies among stretched borrowers to create a flood of foreclosures in the coming months that could add as much as 20% additional supply to the existing inventory.

Full Text

 
(206  words)
(c) 2007 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Reproduced with permission of copyright owner. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.

The rapid unraveling of the subprime-mortgage industry is stirring new concerns about the already weak housing market.

A report released yesterday by Credit Suisse analyst Ivy Zelman forecast that credit tightening for financially stretched borrowers will lead to a 20% drop in new-home sales in 2007, to about 890,000, as buyers find it more difficult to borrow for homes.

Coupled with a general waning in demand for housing and the exodus of speculators from the market, Ms. Zelman expects that credit tightening will cause housing starts to drop 35% to 45% through this year and into 2008 from their peak annual rate of 1.8 million units in January 2006.

While subprime loans -- or loans to people with weak credit -- are often concentrated among entry-level buyers, Ms. Zelman says credit tightening "will affect the entire housing food chain."

If people selling an entry-level home can't find buyers, it often means they can't move up and buy a pricier home. Ms. Zelman, who derives much of her research from surveys with private builders and mortgage originators, also expects rising delinquencies among stretched borrowers to create a flood of foreclosures in the coming months that could add as much as 20% additional supply to the existing inventory.

Indexing (document details)

Subjects:Real estate sales,  Economic impact,  Mortgages,  Subprime lending
Classification Codes9190 United States,  8100 Financial services industry,  8360 Real estate
Locations:United States,  US
Author(s):Michael Corkery
Document types:News
Publication title:Wall Street Journal. (Eastern edition). New York, N.Y.: Mar 13, 2007.  pg. C.2
Source type:Newspaper
ISSN:00999660
ProQuest document ID:1231464561
Text Word Count206
Document URL:

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