Posted at 10:48 AM on August 25, 2009
by Bob Collins
(1 Comments)
Filed under: Economy
| City | % Change |
| Cleveland | 4.18 |
| San Francisco | 3.78 |
| Minneapolis | 3.14 |
| Washington | 2.85 |
| Dallas | 2.72 |
| Boston | 2.65 |
| Denver | 2.54 |
| San Diego | 1.55 |
| Atlanta | 1.45 |
| National Avg | 1.39 |
| Phoenix | 1.13 |
| Los Angeles | 1.08 |
| Chicago | 1.06 |
| Portland | 1.02 |
| Charlotte | 0.72 |
| Miami | 0.54 |
| New York | 0.42 |
| Tampa | 0.39 |
| Seattle | 0.38 |
| Detroit | -0.8 |
| Las Vegas | -1.99 |
Buyers are writing offers. The market is becoming more balanced. In 2007 it seemed like everyone wanted to sell and no one wanted to buy and the inventory of homes on the market kept rising. This year the inventory of homes for sale is much lower than in 2007 or 2008 and it continues to drop. There are currently 1611 homes on the market, or about half as many as there were last August. At the same time almost twice as many homes sold in July of 2009 when compared with July of 2008.The big economic news today, of course, is President Barack Obama's decision to nominate Ben Bernanke for another term as head of the Federal Reserve Board. Good? Bad? You'll want to listen to today's first hour of Midmorning on MPR (Archived audio here). David Wessel, economics editor for The Wall Street Journal and author of "In Fed We Trust," argued that there were times during the financial collapse when the Fed acted as a fourth branch of government. "If we were attacked by a foreign power, and the president of the United States has the ability and power to fire back missiles, the president of the United States does not have billions of dollars in his pocket to save the financial system. Only the Federal Reserve has that," he said.
I guess those new home appraisal rules (that realtors were fuming over because, you know, you couldn't inflate the price anymore) weren't the end of the world after all.
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