Wednesday, May 06, 2009

US Property Markets 22% off its 2006 Peak = $3.8 trillion depreciation in the past 12 months

"Slowing declines in select markets are a bright spot or, at least, what passes for one given current market conditions," Dr. Stan Humphries, Zillow vice president of data and analytics, said in a statement.

SHOOT: Slowing declines is seen as positive? Decline is decline.
clipped from news.yahoo.com
Properties for sale are displayed in the window of Bremis Realty in Somerville


U.S. home values posted a year-over-year decline of 14.2 percent to a Zillow Home Value Index of $182,378, resulting in a total 21.8 percent drop since the market peaked in 2006, according to Zillow's first-quarter Real Estate Market Reports, which encompass 161 metropolitan areas and cover the value changes in all homes, not just homes that have recently sold.


U.S. homes lost $704 billion in value during the first quarter and have depreciated $3.8 trillion in the past 12 months, according to analysis of the reports.


Declining home values left 21.9 percent of all American homeowners with negative equity by the end of the first quarter, Zillow said.


By comparison, 17.6 percent of all homeowners owed more on their mortgage than their property was worth in the fourth quarter of 2008, and 14.3 percent were underwater in the third quarter of last year, the reports showed.

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