Buying
A House Costs As Much As It Did During 2007 Housing Boom, Study Says
The Huffington
Post | By Bonnie
Kavoussi Posted: 06/15/2012 12:02
pm Updated: 06/15/2012 12:17 pm
Buying a house still is as
expensive as it was during the height of the housing boom in 2007, according to
a recent study by Andrew Davidson and Alexander Levin of Andrew Davidson &
Co
In
spite of falling housing prices, it still is as unaffordable to buy a house as
it was during the height of the housing boom, according to a new study.
Even
though housing prices and mortgage interest rates have hit record lows, buying a house still
is as expensive as it was in 2007 -- when housing prices were astronomical --
because banks are requiring heftier down payments and have stopped letting
borrowers make low initial payments, according to a recent study by Andrew Davidson
and Alexander Levin of Andrew
Davidson & Co., a financial research firm. (H/t the Wall Street Journal.)
Among
non-agency loans, the total cost of buying a house (as a percentage of property
value) has barely fallen since peaking in 2008 because the "equity
cost" -- that is, the down payment -- has spiked since 2006 and stayed
elevated, according to the study. Among non-agency loans, the "equity
cost" of buying a house (as a percentage of property value) cost more
between 2009 and 2011 than at any other time since the new millennium. The
"equity cost" for all borrowers has more than doubled since 2006,
according to the study.
So
much for housing affordability.
This
study demonstrates that the reality of the housing market is more complicated
than it seems. Previous studies have found that homeownership now is cheaper
than renting -- if you can afford it. Renting cost 15 percent more than homeownership at the end of last
year, according to recent research by Deutsche Bank cited by the Wall Street
Journal. Buying a house is also cheaper than renting in 98 of the 100 largest
metropolitan areas, according to research by Trulia, a real estate website.
The 30-year mortgage interest rate hit record lows in May, according to
Freddie Mac. That is largely thanks to efforts by the Federal Reserve tobring down interest rates to boost the economy. Housing prices
also have continued to fall across the country, according to the S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Indices.
But homeownership still is a distant dream for many.
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