
With the economic recovery
sluggish at best, many ask what impact this has on housing. Over the
last several years, most economists believed that housing would not recover until
the overall economy recovered. However, it now seems that the housing sector
may be a driving influence in the recovery.
Here are four reports released
in the last 30 days affirming this point:
Morgan Stanley
“In terms of its contribution to
real GDP, residential fixed investment
has been a positive – albeit modest
– force over the most recent four quarters, marking its longest span of
back-to-back positive results since 2005.”
Deutsche Bank
“The [overall] resumption in
residential activity cannot be understated as the long awaited housing recovery should help buoy consumer
confidence and provide a mild lift to second half economic output after what was likely a disappointing first half of the year.”
Fannie Mae
“The data from the past month
collectively point to decelerating economic growth, but growth
nonetheless…However, despite signs of deteriorating momentum for economic
activity, housing continues to be a bright spot as news from the housing market
has been relatively upbeat, presenting a
rare upside boost to the economy.”
Goldman Sachs
“As we look back at previous
major housing recoveries, 1975 and 1991 began with negative jobs growth…In each
case, the home sales recovery was fueled by home price improvement, driving new job growth and those jobs creating a fresh wave of
demand that supported a multi-year
recovery in housing.”
Is housing a victim to the current economic malaise? No. It may even be the cure.
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