Moving to Cincinnati?  Welcome to Cincinnati! The Queen City Blog is where Cincinnati real estate professionals share insights about the city and its many neighborhoods.

Before moving to Cincinnati, or in Cincinnati, read what the locals are saying first.
Your tourguides in Cincinnati Each contributor to The Queen City Blog is an active member of the local real estate community. Without spin or hype, expect frank talk and honest discussion about the city of Cincinnati and its homes.

Housing Permits Spike For The Second Straight Month

Housing Starts Jan 2008-Dec 2009A “Housing Start” is a privately-owned home on which construction has started. It’s an important gauge of housing health because it tracks new housing stock nationwide.

In December 2009, starts fell by nearly 7 percent.

The news is mildly disappointing but not too bad. The likely cause for the Housing Starts drop is December’s rough weather conditions. It’s tough to break ground when Mother Nature won’t coordinate and last month was especially hazardous in a lot of parts of the country.

More cheery, however, is that for the second straight month, Housing Permits exploded. 

A housing permit is an certification from local government that authorizes construction. After posting a 7 percent gain in November, permits rose by another 8 percent in December.

It’s a signal that housing is, indeed, in recovery — despite the falling number of actual starts. More permits mean that builders plan to bring more homes on the market for what’s expected to be a very busy spring home-shopping season.

According to the Census Bureau, 82% of homes start construction within 60 days of permit-issuance.  Therefore, Housing Starts should start rising soon anyway.

For home buyers, the news couldn’t be better. 

With more homes coming online, competition among home sellers should increase, and that will suppress the rise in home prices in Chicago and nationwide. 

It’s basic economics.  When home supplies grow faster than home demand, prices fall.

Housing Starts Jump; Home Sellers Lament.

Housing Starts Dec 2007-Nov 2009Housing Starts jumped last month as builders got back to business.  It’s a telling sign for the economy, but bad news for next season’s sellers.

With more homes coming online, home prices may be slow to rise throughout Symmes Township and nationwide.

A “Housing Start” is a privately-owned home on which construction has started. In November, starts rose by nearly 9 percent while remaining within the same tight range we’ve seen since June.

More interesting that Housing Starts, though, is the accompanying data for Housing Permits. After a 5-month plateau, Housing Permits finally broke through, posting its largest number in 12 months.

This, too, bodes poorly for sellers.

Housing permits are precursors to housing starts so because the number of permits are higher today, we expect that the number of starts will be higher just a few months from now.

According to the Census Bureau, 82% of homes start construction within 60 days of permit-issuance.

More permits means more starts which, in turn, leads to a larger home inventory. And when home supplies grow faster than the home demand, prices fall.

Throughout the early part of 2010, low mortgage rates and federal tax credits should help hold demand high but if builders flood the market with new, quality product, sellers may find that they’ve lost some of their leverage.

For home buyers, the rise in starts is welcomed.

RECENTPOSTS

AROUNDTOWN

THEWRITERS

THECOMMENTS

  • None found
Da'Sean Butler for the win! holy crap!  Bill Clinton & Terry McAuliffe at the Big East quarterfinals  Da'Sean Butler shoots with 1 second left  aaron maas  aaron maas  aaron maas  aaron maas  Clifton & Ludlow  Arlin's