Overall our real estate market has done really well and some economist are anticipating a “Smooth Landing“. We haven’t seen the large price declines like we have on the mainland. When you read all of the doom and gloom articles on the mainland, you can’t help but think that real estate is bad everywhere, and be hesitant about purchasing a home here in Hawaii.
A few articles surfaced recently that may detail that some happy rays of light are to come to the national housing picture. Slivers Of Good News Seen In Housing, Amid Plenty Of Bad (Honolulu Advertiser). We also see, Consumer Outlook Up, Worst Of Housing May Be Over (Honolulu Advertiser) and Is The Slowdown, Slowing Down?
Let me highlight these articles:
While no one is ready to call the bottom of the worst housing collapse in decades, there were glimmers this week that the severity could be waning. Reports yesterday showed the glut of newly built homes on the market fell to a five-month low last month, while the decline in home prices is starting to ease, and in some cities values are even starting to rise. What’s more, existing home sales rose slightly from June to July, according to data Monday.
Americans felt better about the economy in August, as a widely watched barometer of sentiment posted the biggest boost in two years amid falling gas prices. Meanwhile, two reports suggested that the worst may be over for the slumping housing market.
A relatively upbeat Case-Shiller reading and the slowing pace of home price declines point to hope that the housing market is nearing its bottom.
Now, our local Hawaii real estate market has done very well, esp. in Metro Oahu(Honolulu/Waikiki) up 2% year-to-date. Honolulu by itself is up 3.8% and Waialae-Kahala is up 12%.
One of the biggest misunderstandings I here from people, is that because the news about the national real estate market is so bad, so is Hawaii’s real estate market.
Well that isn’t the case, and what happens when the consumer confidence in the housing market turns positive on the mainland. What effect will it have on the Hawaii real estate market? I don’t think it will be a negative impact.
So…we have a local market that has done really well, we start to see slivers of positive news in the national housing market that surely won’t adversely affect the Hawaii housing market, and also look at the following:
The NAR’s estimate for interest rates:
· Average 30-year fixed mortgage rate in December: 6.6%
· Average 30-year fixed mortgage rate by mid-2009: 6.8%
rates right now are at 6.4% (roughly).
If you are looking at timing the market, understand that you have a potential double whammy coming up. Positive national news will be positive for the real estate market here, and an increase in interest rates will cost more in a monthly mortgage payment.
$500,000 loan amount (30 year fixed fully amortizing) at a 6.4% interest rate and your payment is: $3,127.53
$500,000 loan amount (30 year fixed fully amortizing) at 6.8% interest rate and your mortgage payment per month is: $3,259.63
That is more than $100 more a month in a mortgage payment just by changing the interest rate.