New York Home Prices Forecast to Drop 40%

A home and neighboring lots are set for sale on April 29, 2009 in Atlantic City, New Jersey.
A home and neighboring lots are set for sale in Atlantic City, New Jersey.
Spencer Platt / Getty
  • Print
  • Reprints

What's it feel like to survive one hurricane only to be told that another is on the way? New York City–area homeowners are in just that spot. After the region suffered the brunt of financial-industry cutbacks, the next big wave of woe could be a nor'easter of collapsing home prices. That's the forecast of an extensive new report on residential real estate by Deutsche Bank, which calls for home prices in metropolitan New York City (which includes Westchester, northern New Jersey and other nearby areas) to fall 40.6% from the prices that prevailed in March.

Related

Audio

Host Katherine Lanpher talks with TIME's Justin Fox on the world after the recession and Barbara Kiviat on dealing with our debt

Download | Subscribe

Ironically, that dire forecast is wrapped in an improving forecast for nationwide home prices. Back in March, Deutsche Bank analysts had expected national home prices to decline 16.5%; now they foresee just a 14% decline. That mildly upbeat news does not hold true for the New York City area, however, which is expected to see a 40.6% drop. While that is also a slight improvement from the March forecast, it is dire nonetheless. (See photos of the global financial crisis.)

To arrive at their forecasts, the Deutsche Bank analysts, led by Karen Weaver, assessed several leading variables, with affordability being a key driver. The pronounced decline in home prices across the nation, coupled with a downward drift in interest rates, has greatly improved nationwide affordability, the report noted. Indeed, in some famously overpriced regions that have since corrected, such as Los Angeles and the Riverside–San Bernardino areas of California, affordability is as good now as it has been in decades. That's a big reason that many California areas may see prices fall only an additional 10% or so, despite the state's deepening financial crisis. (See "Four Steps to Ending the Foreclosure Crisis.")

New York City's big problem is not so much the financial-industry meltdown as it is an intense lack of affordability. As the report notes, metropolitan-area New York home prices peaked in the second quarter of 2007 at $552,000. By the first quarter of 2009, the median price had dropped 19%, to $446,000, but the market swoon was less than half the drop recorded in many other areas of the country. Today among the 10 biggest metropolitan areas, New York ranks as the least affordable.

See "10 Things to Do With Your Money Right Now."

See TIME's Pictures of the Week.

See "House of Cards: The Faces Behind Foreclosures."
  • Print
  • Reprints

Quotes of the Day »

Get & Share
RANDY RAYBURN, a Tennessee tavern owner who led a successful legal fight against a law allowing patrons to bring guns into bars
For use in rail of Articles page or Section Fronts pages. Duplicate and change name as necesssary to distinguish.

Time.com on Digg

POWERED BY digg

Quotes of the Day »

Get & Share
A POSTING on Golf.com by an anonymous player who said President Obama and his friends moved painfully slowly on the links

Stay Connected with TIME.com