"….and then the great housing bust ended in 2010 and they all lived happily ever after…." – Lawrence Yun, chief economist, National Association of Realtors

O.K. Yun may not have said it exactly like that, but this looks pretty darn close. [Thanks L!]
Home sales will increase 15 percent to about 5.7 million units and REALTOR® income will be up 20 percent in 2010, NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun told a packed room of REALTORS® today in a residential economic update at the 2009 NAR Conference & Expo.
Yun credited the home buyer tax credit with unleashing sales on the lower-end of the housing market this year, bringing up to 400,000 first-time buyers into the market who wouldn’t have bought otherwise. That influx tightened inventories of starter homes, shored up prices, and helped reduce households’ fear over continuing price drops.
This virtuous cycle will continue now that the federal government has extended the credit to mid-2010 and expanded it to make a smaller credit available to repeat buyers and to households with higher incomes. “The key is stabilizing prices and preserving household wealth,” he says.
Yun predicts the supply of homes to stabilize at the historic norm of six to seven months. Homes above $500,000 will remain elevated in the near-term, but that weakness will be offset by a hefty drop in starter-home inventories, which are running at about a five months supply.
The tightening inventory at all price points will help improve market performance by bringing supply into better balance with demand, but the added sales, particularly on the higher end, will also increase the number and quality of the market comparables used by appraisers to assign valuations. Once appraisals improve, foreclosures will ease, blunting their drag on the market and making it less likely that Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and even FHA will need help from the taxpayer.
What a happy, feel-good story. It’s enough to bring tears to your eyes. I may need a tissue….









“Tightening of inventory”
That is what got me rolling.
EVERYWHERE I go, For sale signs are popping up.
Not even to mention commercial.
A main shopping area around my house had no “FOR LEASE” signs 2 years ago.
Now I count 22.
A main mall here had around 60 stores a few years ago.Now it has 3.
How it stays open , I dont know.
Well, he has to say something to earn his keep. . .all those RE Agents walking around downtown SD are now charged up, and spending thier money to help our local economy. . .hope they don’t take their rose colored glasses off and notice all the “for sale” signs on downtown condos. . .also the number of “reduced rent” on Craigslist for SD has just hit an all time high – I have been tracking that for 3 years now!
All Yun is really saying is that monthly sales will remain the same as they are now. Remember the first quarter was horrible. So if you extrapolate Q2-Q4 to next year then we will see an increase of 15% year over year in sales. Not saying much.
As for Realtor income going up. That is easy. There are a huge number of Realtors dropping out of the industry. The local board lost 18% this past October (when dues were due). Less Realtors means more income for the remaining.
As for values stabilizing. ROTFLOL! New boss, same as the old boss..
That picture is just wrong.
Linenoise-
I miss Keith from HousingPanic and his ability to do marvelous photoshop pictures. I don’t have his gift. But hey, this is my first attempt.
Igor says it’s “silly” too. Everyone’s a critic!
tobby took my thought. realtors’ incomes almost have to go up when there are about 5 left in the state of AZ. and it’s not tough to go up from zero?