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Home > About BNE > Press Room > 2009 Archive > January > America's 25 Strongest Housing Markets Real EstateAmerica's 25 Strongest Housing MarketsDeborah Orr, 01.07.09, 04:00 PM EST Even in the country's most resilient areas, 2009 prices are expected to fall flat.
In Depth: America's 25 Strongest Housing MarketsThe housing boom passed right over Little Rock, Ark. So has the bust. This quiet mountain metropolis of just over 675,000 saw none of the wild speculation of former boomtowns like Las Vegas or Miami, nor the ruined fortunes that followed. Of course, Little Rock isn't completely isolated from the recent housing downturn. There are 200 foreclosures in the works, according to Trulia.com, an online real estate data provider. Developers are scrapping new housing projects, and sales activity froze in the third quarter.
But housing prices in Little Rock don't look likely to fall by more than about 1% by the middle of next year. That's because they never climbed like they did in the rest of the country. In fact, 1% is about how much they have risen in the last year. In Depth: America's 25 Strongest Housing MarketsIt's the same story for McAllen, Texas, Syracuse, N.Y., Pittsburgh,Buffalo, N.Y., and El Paso, Texas. They top the list of the country's strongest real estate markets, in part because, like Little Rock, "none ... participated in the housing boom," says Mark Zandi, chief economist for Moody's Economy.com. "Some are down just because the economy is bad." Behind the Numbers Not one metro area will see prices increase before the end of this year, according to Zandi's forecasts. The strongest metro areas will be flat at best--but that's better than the 15% drop Moody's expects on average in the U.S. Prices won't start to pick up again until late this year or sometime next year even in the strongest markets. |